There are so many great software titles for processing images out there. But can you imagine how many steps you have to take just in order to stack three of them side by side, having a 50-point gap between them and finally producing a stack image? Stacked Images Into One is something that we can literally use just in order to stack two or three images side by side, having a 50 or 100-point gap between them. Whether we stack them horizontally or vertically, we want to do it in a few steps. If that’s also what you want, you are looking at the right software title. - Steps - 1. Drag and drop image files onto the application window. 2. Set a direction (horizontal or vertical) and orientation (alignment). 3. Select a background color and a gap. 4. Click on the export toolbar buttons. - Features 1. Drag and drop multiple image files directly onto application’s window. 2. Stack multiple images together horizontally. Choose right, center or left alignment. 3. Stack multiple images together vertically. Choose top, middle or bottom alignment. 4. Resize images individually. 5. Select a gap (0, 10, 20, …100 points). 6. Calculate a final image size. 7. Select one of seventeen background colors. 8. Set your own default final image file name. 9. Set your own default open folder where to select image files. 10.Set your own default folder where to save a final stack image. 11. Pile one image over another. (Version 1.1.0) 12.The application supports the dark mode. 13.The fullScreen mode is supported. 14.The application supports the retina screen. (tested with 2019 3 GHz 27″ iMac) 15.Languages: English only. 16.Application file size: 7.0 MB. 17.The application comes with a built-in 10-page user's guide. Click on Quick guide over the Introduction screen. - System requirements 1. macOS 13.5 (Universal) - Limitations 1. One can stack as many as two images together without an in-app purchase. 2. One can pile as many as two images without an in-app purchase. 3. How many images this application can stack into one depends on several factors. One may be able to manage to stack 41 images vertically, each of which has a size of 1,200 px x 750 px (72 dpi), with a 50-point gap into one, producing a 1200 px × 32,750 px final image (72 dpi), using a 16-GB memory Mac mini (Apple M2). Yet, there are always limits as to what a software application can do.