![]() There’s also a “photo” choice that basically just snaps an ordinary picture without optimizing it as a document scan. You can also adjust this after the fact, so it’s fine to stick with the defaults. But if you’d prefer grayscale or black and white (which really cranks up the contrast), just tap the icon of three circles up there and change it. The default settings will capture documents in color. But pay attention to that top row of icons. Once you tap that, the camera opens and asks you to point it at whatever document you’re trying to digitize. The menu that comes up will offer a few options - this is also the tool you’d use to add a photo or sketch to your note - but the “Scan Document” option is the one you want. Inside of any note, hit the + symbol above the keyboard. To try out Apple’s built-in scanner for yourself, open Notes. If you’ve been using a third-party app for this purpose until now - and there are several great ones - you can probably uninstall it in favor of Apple’s own solution. ![]() If there’s a business card, receipt, or any other document you want to save or mark up, this tool makes getting it on your iPhone or iPad dead simple. One of the most useful tricks in Apple’s iOS 11 update is found inside the Notes app: it’s a document scanner.
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