Pixelmator Pro User Guide for Mac
- Welcome
- What’s new
-
- Intro to automatic image editing
- Automatically increase image resolution
- Remove or hide an image background
- Automatically enhance image color
- Automatically match image colors
- Remove color banding in an image
- Automatically reduce image noise
- Automatically crop and straighten images
- Decontaminate image colors
-
- Use presets from your Mac on your iPad
- Use the Pixelmator Pro toolbar
- Pixelmator Pro tools
- Use color controls
- Keyboard shortcuts and gestures
- Customize the Tools sidebar
- About the Pixelmator Pro file format
- Supported media formats
- Work with RAW files
- About Pixelmator Pro sidecar files
- Use the Pixelmator Pro Photos extension
- Restore an earlier document version
- Copyright and trademarks
Replace an image in Pixelmator Pro on Mac
You can quickly swap one image for another while preserving the layer styles, color adjustments, and effects. You can also add an image to an empty layer.
In Pixelmator Pro on Mac, select the layer (in the Layers sidebar) you want to replace.
Choose Format > Replace Layer, then choose any of the following:
Photos: Choose an image from the Photos app on Mac.
Files: Choose an image from your Mac, iCloud, or a connected server or device.
Image Playground: Uses Apple Intelligence* to generate an image from a text-to-image prompt, then replaces the layer with that image.
Add to Playground: Loads the layer into macOS Image Playground, then uses Apple Intelligence* to generate a variation of the layer from a text-to-image prompt, and replaces the layer with the generated image.
Clipboard: Replaces the layer with the contents of the macOS Clipboard.
Apple Intelligence is not available on all Mac models or in all languages or regions.** To access the most recent available features, make sure you’re using the latest version of macOS and have Apple Intelligence turned on.
Click Replace.
If the replacement image is larger than the canvas, some of its content may be hidden beyond the edges of the canvas. Choose Image > Reveal Canvas, to see the entire image.