This is a plugin that uses the HTML5 canvas and FabricJS to allow you to add shapes and text on top of images and display those images.
Author: | Moe Loubani (profile at wordpress.org) |
WordPress version required: | 4.1 |
WordPress version tested: | 4.6 |
Plugin version: | 1.0 |
Added to WordPress repository: | 24-08-2016 |
Last updated: | 24-08-2016
Warning! This plugin has not been updated in over 2 years. It may no longer be maintained or supported and may have compatibility issues when used with more recent versions of WordPress.
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Rating, %: | 0 |
Rated by: | 0 |
Plugin URI: | |
Total downloads: | 1 676 |
Active installs: | 10+ |
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Screenshots
This shows the editing process after one round of adding different annotations and shapes. You can see how things are labeled and the speech bubble is used.
This shows how easy it is to just move objects around, remove objects, move the speech bubble around and decide where it goes.
This shows you how to add an annotation to one of your posts or pages.
Here is an example of the annotation in action on a desktop sized screen. The text below is stylable with CSS (or you can hide it!)
This is an example of the annotation on a mobile device, note how the text has been replaced with a larger font and numbers that reference the text below so that it is still readable despite everything getting shrunk down.
FAQ
How can I change the font in the annotations?
Changing font sizes and colors is coming (although you can edit them in the JS files now) but you can add a custom font family by defining a font in your CSS using @font-face with the name ‘annotatorFont’ and then files from whichever font you would like.
When are colors coming? Other fonts?
As soon as I have time I hope to expand this plugin to allow for stroke width (border width) changes, color changes, free drawing and more. Stay updated!
ChangeLog
1.0
- First release of plugin – many more changes to come!
Special thanks to:
Réseau BIBLIO du Centre-du-Québec, de Lanaudière et de la Mauricie (http://www.mabibliotheque.ca/centre-du-quebec-de-lanaudiere-et-de-la-mauricie/fr/index.aspx) and Desaulniers Simard (https://desaulniers-simard.com).
Everyone involved with making and contributing to FabricJS.
Everyone on Stack Overflow and other websites that answers questions and keeps the community strong!