
Still, the feature is better than nothing when you want to dress up your email a bit. While the picture chooser is functional, it doesn’t have the same search capability as the actual Photos app for macOS has. I wish you could drag images straight from Photos into the stationery. Creating your own stationery in Apple Mail It’s Not Perfect, but It’s a Nice Feature On the Personal Stationery tab, click Theme. To add stationery to all of your new emails, click Stationery and Fonts. And, make sure Compose messages in this format is set to HTML. Before you use stationery, make sure Outlook is set to Create email in HTML. In a new message, decorate the email the way you’d like and then click File from the top left of the menu bar, followed by Save as Stationery. Stationery gives your email a consistent look with colorful backgrounds, patterns, and designs. You can even create your own templates to use in your email.

Adding pictures from the Photo Viewer in Apple Mail Creating Your Own Stationery in Apple Mail You can drag images from that window into your email.

A small window will pop up providing you access to your Photos library. What you can do, however, is click on the image frame itself. It seems odd that Apple wouldn’t provide this functionality, but I’ve seen other instances where dragging and dropping a picture from Photos did absolutely nothing. Unfortunately, you can’t just drag images from the Photos app. Adding photos to some stationeries is easy Just drag an image from your Finder to insert it into its frame. If you choose a piece of stationery that allows photos, you’ll see blank spots to place your pictures in. The stationery pane in Apple Mail Using Apple Mail Stationery It’s organized by categories like Favorites, Birthday, Announcements, Photos, and so forth.

Lo and behold, there’s the Apple Mail stationery pane. Finding the stationery pane in Apple Mail isnt easy
