Mac Dock Icons Download

  1. Drive, Get Info. Click on the drive that you want to change the icon. Type 'Command-i,' or right-click and select 'Get Info' from the menu. Drive, Paste the Icon. In the info window that opens, click on the icon in the top left corner and the icon will highlight. Type 'Command-v' to paste the icon.
  2. MacOS Big Sur & MontereymacOS App icons. MacOS App icons. Download one of our free icon templates from the resources page. Important There's a technical issue with the server and I'm currently away on holiday until next week. Apologies for any inconvenience caused. (All your icons are safe, don't worry 😊).
  3. Big Sur - Docks and Icons - Download free rocketdock skins #14775. Description: Fans of Mac OS-style design will love the new skin for RocketDock. It was developed by niivu, including a light and dark version of the rounded dock, as well as a full set of PNG icons.
Icons

Right-click on the Downloads Folder in the dock to bring up the options menu. Once the options menu appears, hover your mouse over Options and then click on Remove From Dock Option in the contextual menu that appears (See image below). The Downloads Folder will be immediately removed from the Dock and placed in the Home Directory of your user account on Mac. Find the download folder you added to the dock. Right click on that folder and do get info. In the pane that opens there should be a line that says 'Original' with the location of the actual downloadeds folder. Go to that downloads folder and drag it to the dock area where the other download folder is located.

Move Items On Mac Dock

The Dock is a convenient way to get at oft-used icons. By default, the Dock comes stocked with icons that Apple thinks you’ll need most frequently, but you can customize it to contain any icons that you choose.

Download MAC DOCK - Simulates the Mac OS X dock, providing one-click access to various tools and programs and enabling you to add the files or apps you want as shortcuts. When you install Office for Mac, the app icons aren’t automatically added to the dock. To add to the dock, drag the app icon from the Launchpad or the Applications folder.

Adding Dock icons

You can customize your Dock with favorite applications, a document you update daily, or maybe a folder containing your favorite recipes. Use the Dock for anything you need quick access to.

Adding an application, file, or folder to the Dock is as easy as 1-2-3:

Icons

Adding To Dock On Mac

  1. Open a Finder window that contains an application, a document file, or a folder you use frequently.

    You can also drag an icon — including a hard drive icon — from the Desktop or any Finder window.

  2. Click the item you want to add to the Dock.

    In the figure, the TextEdit application is highlighted.

  3. Drag the icon out of the Finder window and onto the Dock.

    The icons to the left and right of the new icon magically part to make room for it. Note that the Dock item isn’t the actual item. That item remains wherever it was — in a window or on the Desktop. The icon you see in the Dock is a shortcut that opens the item. The icon on the Dock is actually an alias of the icon you dragged onto the Dock.

    Furthermore, when you remove an icon from the Dock, as you find out how to do in a moment, you aren’t removing the actual application, document, or folder. You’re removing only its shortcut from the Dock.

    Folder, disk, document, and URL icons must sit on the right side of the divider line in the Dock; Application icons must sit on the left side of it. That’s the rule: apps on the left; folders, disks, documents, and URLs on the right.

As long as you follow the rule, you can add several items to either side of the divider line at the same time by selecting them all and dragging the group to that side of the Dock. You can delete only one icon at a time from the Dock, however.

Adding a URL to the Dock works slightly differently. Here’s a quick way to add a URL to the Dock:

  1. Open Safari, and go to the page with a URL that you want to save in the Dock.

  2. Click the small icon that you find to the left of the URL in the address bar and drag it to the right side of the dividing line in the Dock.

  3. Release the mouse button when the icon is right where you want it.

    The icons in the Dock slide over and make room for your URL. From now on, when you click the URL icon that you moved to your Dock, Safari opens to that page.

If you open an icon that normally doesn’t appear in the Dock, and you want to keep its temporary icon in the Dock permanently, you have two ways to tell it to stick around after you quit the program:

  • Control-click (or click and hold) and choose Keep in Dock from the menu that pops up.

  • Drag the icon (for an application that’s currently open) off and then back to the Dock (or to a different position in the Dock) without letting go of the mouse button.

Removing an icon from the Dock

Removing an item from the Dock is as easy as 1-2-3 but without the 3:

Mac
  1. Drag its icon off the Dock and onto the Desktop.

  2. When you see the Remove bubble, release the icon (mouse button).

  3. There is no Step 3.

You can also choose Remove from Dock in the item’s Dock menu to get it out of your Dock, but this way is way more fun.

You can’t remove the icon of a program that’s currently running from the Dock by dragging it. Either wait until you quit the program or choose Remove from Dock in its Dock menu.

Also, note that by moving an icon off the Dock, you aren’t moving, deleting, or copying the item itself; you’re just removing its icon from the Dock. The item is unchanged. The icon is sort of like a library catalog card: Just because you remove the card from the card catalog doesn’t mean that the book is gone from the library.

The Dock in OS X releases prior to Mountain Lion included icons for the Documents and Applications folders. The Dock in Mountain Lion and Yosemite does not, at least not by default, show those folders. Having those folders on the Dock is convenient, and you should consider adding them to your Dock if they aren’t already there.

On the other hand, for those with Macs that once ran OS X 10.7 (Lion) or earlier versions and have since been upgraded to Yosemite, your Documents and Applications folders are still on your Yosemite Dock unless you removed them at some point.

Move Icons On Mac Dock

Lately, I’ve been running across an oh-so-annoying issue: several of my Mac’s Dock icons are missing, with a generic application icon displayed instead.
What happens is this: I click on an app to open it, and then its icon changes to the weird default one shown above. Mostly the issue only affects an app or two, but a few times, I’ve seen entire Docks full of those same icons. Which, as you can imagine, doesn’t make it easy for folks to see what they’re clicking on. Plus, it looks strange. Plus, it’s just not right! If you’re experiencing missing Dock icons too, here’s a troubleshooting tip that may help.

Remove and Re-Add the App to Your Dock

Mac Dock Icons Missing

One solution to the missing Dock icon issue is to temporarily remove the app from your Dock and then re-add it. To remove an app from your Dock, you can click, hold, and drag its icon up off the Dock and then let go, which will result in it disappearing in a nice little “poof” animation.
Alternatively, you can right-click (or Control-click) on the app’s icon and select Options > Remove from Dock in the menu. Regardless of which method you use, note that this only removes the icon from your Dock. It doesn’t uninstall or delete the actual app from your Mac, so no worries there.
Once that generic icon is gone, add the application back to your Dock. One way to do that is to open your Applications folder and drag the item in question down into your Dock; you can find a shortcut to that Applications folder by clicking on the blue smiley face on the left side of your Dock to open the Finder…
…and then selecting “Applications” from the “Go” menu at the top (or pressing its associated shortcut, which is Shift-Command-A).
When your Applications folder opens, find the program you’re wanting to add, then just drag its icon down into the Dock and let go to put it back in.
Be sure to drag it to the left side of the dividing line on your Dock; if you try to put it near the trash on the right side, it won’t work.
Applications go on the left side of that line, and folders, files, and other shortcuts live on the right side. In many cases, removing and re-adding an application can solve the issue.

Change Mac Dock Icons

Boot into Safe Mode

If adding the icon back in doesn’t work—if you’re still seeing a generic icon for that program, or if you’re having this problem with so many apps that you’d rather fix them all at once—a second troubleshooting method is booting into what’s called Safe Mode. This special troubleshooting technique will clean out some low-level caches and other files that could be the source of your problem. To attempt this, first shut your Mac down from the Apple Menu at the upper-left corner of your screen.
Afterward, press the power button to turn your computer back on, and then immediately hold down the Shift key on your keyboard.
Keep holding down the Shift key until you’re asked to log in to your account using your password (the Safe Mode boot process will take a bit longer than a standard boot, so be patient). After you’re logged in, you’ll want to go back to the Apple Menu and pick “Restart” to reboot your computer normally and exit Safe Mode. Your machine won’t work properly until you do, as Safe Mode is meant to be a troubleshooting tool, not a mode to work in!
But anyway, once you restart, your Dock will likely be back to normal. This is a bug that has plagued macOS for years, and I’m sorry to see it resurfacing on my clients’ computers and on mine, too. I like solving problems for other people, but I’m not such a happy camper when these things happen to my own precious Mac!