Visit the Chrome Web Store to add the extension to your Chrome Browser.
Open the Email Signature Rescue extension by clicking on the pink ESR logo at the top right of your browser.
Note: If you don't see the ESR icon, click the Extensions icon then click the pin next to the Email Signature Rescue extension.
Click the Add New Email Signature button to create an install. Select your email client from the dropdown list, then paste your signature key into the next field and click Save Key.
Important: If you're using more than one email account, click Advanced Settings then enter the email address of the account that you want your email signature to work with. This will prevent the signature from being applied to all email accounts.
Compose a new email and your email signature will automatically insert into your emails.
Download or save your HTML email signature file to your computer, then open it in your web browser.
With the email signature open in your web browser, press Ctrl + A (⌘ + A for Mac) to highlight the signature, then press Ctrl + C (⌘ + C for Mac) to copy the signature.
Important: Do not use your mouse to select the area, only use Ctrl + A (or ⌘ + A) as you may miss out on grabbing some of the code.
Login to your Gmail account and navigate to the Settings cog icon at the top right of your screen, then select Settings from the list, and select See All Settings.
Scroll down the page until you see your Signature settings, then click Create New and enter a new name for your email signature. Click inside the text field to the right of your signature name, then press Ctrl + V (⌘ + V for Mac) to paste your copied email signature.
Under Signature Defaults, select your new signature for New Emails Use, and On Reply/Forward Use.
Scroll down and hit Save Changes, then compose a new email and your email signature will automatically insert.
Download and install our macOS Signature Installer App.
Run the app once, then you can Quit using the icon at the bottom left of the app.
Open Safari and from your menu bar select Safari, then Preferences. Go to the Extensions tab and enable Email Signature Rescue.
Once enabled, an ESR icon will appear on your Safari toolbar to the left of your URL address bar. Click the extension icon to expand the extension, then complete the steps to install your email signature.
Select Gmail from the first drop down box. Enter the email address that you'd like the email signature to apply to. And finally, insert your signature key and click Install.
Your email signature will now automatically insert when composing an email within Gmail in Safari.
Download or save your HTML email signature file to your computer, then open it in your web browser.
With the email signature open in your web browser, press Cmd + A to highlight the signature, then press Cmd + C to copy the signature.
Important: Do not use your mouse to select the area, only use Ctrl + A as you may miss out on grabbing some of the code.
Login to your Gmail account and navigate to the Settings cog icon at the top right of your screen, then select Settings from the list, and select See All Settings.
Scroll down the page until you see your Signature settings, then click Create New and enter a new name for your email signature. Click inside the text field to the right of your signature name, then press Ctrl + V (⌘ + V for Mac) to paste your copied email signature.
Under Signature Defaults, select your new signature for New Emails Use, and On Reply/Forward Use.
Scroll down and hit Save Changes, then compose a new email and your email signature will automatically insert.
Install the latest version of the Firefox Add-On here. Click Continue to Installation when prompted, then Add.
Open the Email Signature Rescue add-on by clicking the puzzle icon, then selecting Email Signature Rescue.
Click the Add New Email Signature button to create an install. Select your email client from the dropdown list, then paste your signature key into the next field and click Save Key.
Important: If you're using more than one email account, click Advanced Settings then enter the email address of the account that you want your email signature to work with. This will prevent the signature from being applied to all email accounts.
Compose a new email and your email signature will automatically insert into your emails.
Download or save your HTML email signature file to your computer, then open it in your web browser.
With the email signature open in your web browser, press Ctrl + A (⌘ + A for Mac) to highlight the signature, then press Ctrl + C (⌘ + C for Mac) to copy the signature.
Important: Do not use your mouse to select the area, only use Ctrl + A (or ⌘ + A) as you may miss out on grabbing some of the code.
Login to your Gmail account and navigate to the Settings cog icon at the top right of your screen, then select Settings from the list, and select See All Settings.
Scroll down the page until you see your Signature settings, then click Create New and enter a new name for your email signature. Click inside the text field to the right of your signature name, then press Ctrl + V (⌘ + V for Mac) to paste your copied email signature.
Under Signature Defaults, select your new signature for New Emails Use, and On Reply/Forward Use.
Scroll down and hit Save Changes, then compose a new email and your email signature will automatically insert.
Visit the Chrome Web Store to add the extension to your Brave Browser.
Note: Brave does support using Chrome extensions
Open the Email Signature Rescue extension by clicking on the pink ESR logo at the top right of your browser.
Note: If you don't see the ESR icon, click the Extensions icon then click the pin next to the Email Signature Rescue extension.
Click the Add New Email Signature button to create an install. Select your email client from the dropdown list, then paste your signature key into the next field and click Save Key.
Important: If you're using more than one email account, click Advanced Settings then enter the email address of the account that you want your email signature to work with. This will prevent the signature from being applied to all email accounts.
Compose a new email and your email signature will automatically insert into your emails.
Download or save your HTML email signature file to your computer, then open it in your web browser.
With the email signature open in your web browser, press Ctrl + A (⌘ + A for Mac) to highlight the signature, then press Ctrl + C (⌘ + C for Mac) to copy the signature.
Important: Do not use your mouse to select the area, only use Ctrl + A (or ⌘ + A) as you may miss out on grabbing some of the code.
Login to your Gmail account and navigate to the Settings cog icon at the top right of your screen, then select Settings from the list, and select See All Settings.
Scroll down the page until you see your Signature settings, then click Create New and enter a new name for your email signature. Click inside the text field to the right of your signature name, then press Ctrl + V (⌘ + V for Mac) to paste your copied email signature.
Under Signature Defaults, select your new signature for New Emails Use, and On Reply/Forward Use.
Scroll down and hit Save Changes, then compose a new email and your email signature will automatically insert.
Open your HTML email signature in your iOS device's browser app.
Tap and hold your finger down on the text in your email signature and you will see a tooltip appear. Tap Select All, then select Copy.
NOTE: If the tooltip does not show, you can drag the highlighted area above and below to grab the full email signature.
Open your Airmail App on your iOS device. Select the menu icon at the top left of the app, then select Settings at the bottom left.
Tap the email account you want to install your email signature into, then select Signatures.
You will now see a blank signature text field to add your email signature into. If there is any text in here, delete it. Once empty, tap and hold inside the field, then press Paste.
Your email signature is now installed and will automatically appear when composing emails from the Airmail iOS App.
Show an animated gif that shows where the key value is in our app, it could zoom in from the full page view to where the key button is, show it being pressed, revealing the key and then showing the key value being copied.