Chrome - Click Copy image address Firefox - Click Copy Image Location Microsoft Edge - Click Copy link Internet Explorer - Click Properties, select the URL to the right of the “Address” heading, and press Ctrl+C. Safari - Click Copy image address

If you don’t have the Google Chrome app, you can download it for free from either the iPhone’s App Store or the Android’s Google Play Store.

If there’s any text in the address bar, tapping it should highlight it; if not you’ll need to remove the text before proceeding.

On Android, you may tap Go or Enter/Return here instead.

On Android, you’ll tap the Android “Share” {“smallUrl”:“https://www. wikihow. com/images/8/83/Android7share. png”,“bigUrl”:"/images/thumb/8/83/Android7share. png/30px-Android7share. png",“smallWidth”:460,“smallHeight”:460,“bigWidth”:30,“bigHeight”:30,“licensing”:"<div class="mw-parser-output">

I edited this screenshot of an Android icon\n</p>

License: <a target="_blank" rel="nofollow noreferrer noopener" class="external text" href="http://en. wikipedia. org/wiki/Fair_use">Fair Use</a>
\n</p></div>"} icon instead.

For example, the images in this wikiHow article are actually thumbnails. To see the full-size version, you’d need to click the image to open the full-size version in a new window.

If you’re using a Mac with a one-button mouse, hold Ctrl and click the image to open the right-click menu. On a mobile platform (e. g. , a smartphone or a tablet), you can instead tap-and-hold the image and then tap the Copy URL or Copy Link menu option. Not all browsers will have this option.

Chrome - Click Copy image address Firefox - Click Copy Image Location Microsoft Edge - Click Copy link Internet Explorer - Click Properties, select the URL to the right of the “Address” heading, and press Ctrl+C. Safari - Click Copy image address

If you copy something else before pasting it, the copied URL will be overwritten with whatever you copied last.

You can give your image a title by clicking the text box directly above the image and typing in a title.