Microsoft Office Picture Manager

[6] Basic image editing features include color correct, crop, flip, resize, and rotate.

Microsoft terminated support for Picture Manager with the release of Office 2013 and recommended Photos and Word as replacements because of their digital imaging capabilities.

[4] In Office 2003 Beta 2, released in March 2003, it retained its preliminary Picture Library name and integrated with SharePoint by automatically opening when users added multiple images to a library; users could access these images from within other Office 2003 applications with the Shared Workspace task pane.

[14] Basic image editing features include color correct, crop, flip, resize, and rotate.

Advanced features include brightness, contrast, hue, and saturation adjustment; batch processing; compression; and red-eye removal.

The following effects of Photo Editor are not included in Picture Manager: Chalk and Charcoal, Edge, Graphic Pen, Negative, Notepaper, Posterize, Sharpen, Soften, Stained Glass, Stamp, Texturizer, and Watercolor.

The Edit Pictures task pane with image editing options