This Week's Sponsor:

Winterfest 2024

The Festival of Artisanal Software


Evernote for Mac Gets Direct Skitch Integration

Evernote and Skitch

Evernote and Skitch

With a new version released today, Evernote has updated its Mac app to include a brand new communication layer with Skitch, the company’s image/document annotation and sharing tool.

When Evernote acquired Skitch in the summer of 2011, I wondered how they would manage to deeply integrate the two apps in a way that would make storing a note and annotating it a seamless experience. In the past two years, Evernote focused on revamping its desktop and iOS clients and on launching a new version of Skitch with Evernote integration – meaning that Skitch could sync notes to Evernote, and those notes would show up inside an Evernote notebook with inline previews and changes, but Evernote couldn’t direct plug into Skitch for further editing. Here’s what I wrote in 2011:

According to Evernote, the engineers at the two companies will be working closely in the coming months to deeply integrate Skitch and Evernote with each other, as right now the only way to let the apps communicate on a Mac is by annotating an image in Skitch, and manually drag it into Evernote. It wouldn’t be a surprise if the app gained a feature to push annotations to Evernote’s cloud to avoid drag & drop — considering the app is coming to mobile devices, this has been certainly considered by the Evernote team.

Users could drag and drop images between Evernote and Skitch, but that would result in duplicate files and wasted storage space – an issue that was exacerbated by iOS’ inferior sharing capabilities and limited “Open In” menu. In short, it always struck me as unusual that Evernote couldn’t figure out a way to let its apps “talk” to each other, avoiding manual interaction in favor of simple, intuitive inter-app communication that treated Evernote as a storage space and browser, and Skitch as an editor.

Today’s Evernote 5.2 for Mac does exactly this, and quite admirably as well. I have been testing the new version, which has gained a new Skitch button in the note editor that allows you to send any note – either as text, image, or combination of both – directly to Skitch for editing. When you’re done annotating in Skitch, you can send a file back to Evernote – and not just back to Evernote’s cloud, but back to the Evernote app itself, which will automatically come in the foreground again, showing the new version of an image/document already inside a note.

Evernote and Skitch

Evernote and Skitch

The “Mark up with Skitch” menu lists images contained in a note and also offers a shortcut to grab an entire note’s contents, convert it to PDF, and send the PDF to Skitch. In my testing, I have enjoyed the PDF feature as it lets me use the Evernote web clipper to grab a webpage’s selection (that may feature text styles, rich layouts, and images), but Skitch to annotate it as PDF with the app’s handy arrows and callouts. Notes that are sent to Skitch as PDF will be saved back to Evernote with “Annotated” in the title, whereas selecting images from a note will simply take you back to that specific note, only with updated images displayed inline.

Evernote and Skitch

Evernote and Skitch

I think the process is well-designed, and it also comes with a contextual menu to right-click images and choose whether you want to mark up the Evernote version or a copy in Skitch. PDF annotation is a Premium feature, not available to Free users.

Evernote 5.2 comes with other improvements, such as inline preview for Office documents attached to notes, and a new highlighter tool to highlight portions of text. I have used the highlighter occasionally, and I think it’s a nice addition.

I’ve always believed that Evernote should have figured out a way to make Evernote and Skitch communication go beyond storage and sync, and I’m satisfied with the approach Evernote decided to take to address the issue. Instead of building a new Skitch inside the Evernote app, the company chose to leverage inter-app communication to keep each app separate and unique, while avoiding the creation of duplicate files and a convoluted experience. The “Mark up with Skitch” menu is easy to use, but I’m curious to see if and how Evernote will bring this functionality to iOS.

Access Extra Content and Perks

Founded in 2015, Club MacStories has delivered exclusive content every week for nearly a decade.

What started with weekly and monthly email newsletters has blossomed into a family of memberships designed every MacStories fan.

Learn more here and from our Club FAQs.

Club MacStories: Weekly and monthly newsletters via email and the web that are brimming with apps, tips, automation workflows, longform writing, early access to the MacStories Unwind podcast, periodic giveaways, and more;

Club MacStories+: Everything that Club MacStories offers, plus an active Discord community, advanced search and custom RSS features for exploring the Club’s entire back catalog, bonus columns, and dozens of app discounts;

Club Premier: All of the above and AppStories+, an extended version of our flagship podcast that’s delivered early, ad-free, and in high-bitrate audio.