


The mass post editor opens an archive view of your blog and allows you to make changes to several posts at once. To stop notifications, tap or click the person-shaped icon again and tap "Stop notifications." If you unfollow a blog, you will no longer be subscribed and notifications will stop. If you’ve subscribed to a blog, you’ll see a small lightning bolt next to the person-shaped icon when you view that blog. Then, tap or click "Get notifications." You can also subscribe by visiting their URL and clicking the "Get Notifications" button that appears in the top right corner of the screen. Tap on the person-shaped icon in the upper right corner of a blog you follow (or on the web, hover over a blog’s avatar and click the person-shaped icon). You can subscribe to a blog you follow to get notifications whenever it’s updated with a fresh post. Open your account menu (the little human) and then click "Keyboard shortcuts" to see a list of shortcuts for browsing your dashboard and composing your posts. You can always flip back and forth while you’re making the post. If you use Markdown or HTML frequently when creating your posts, you can choose to make either of those the default text editor in dashboard settings. Paste an image's URL into the post form the image will appear in its place. Add anything you want to the post, then either publish it immediately, queue it for later, or save it as a draft. It’ll be pre-filled with things from the page you're on, including source information. Chrome users can head here, and Firefox users can download it here.Ĭlick the extension icon on your browser's toolbar to open a post form in a new window. Use the Post To Tumblr browser extension to create Tumblr posts from anywhere on the internet. Posting via the Post To Tumblr Browser Extension If something unexpected happens, try turning the feature off.

Please keep in mind that these are not official, fully supported features. Enable Tumblr Labs to enjoy some experimental features.
