There is no obvious way to download an image from a Google Docs document.
Download the document to an HTML file.
Like most online publications, The Verge uses a CMS (content management system) to upload its content to the web. This particular CMS demands that you upload any images you want to use separately from the text — which usually presents no problems. But recently, a writer submitted an otherwise fine story in which they had included the images within the text. The writer had gone on vacation, so I couldn’t ask them to send the images separately — and there didn’t seem to be an obvious way to download the pictures so I could pop them into the CMS.
After doing some research, I discovered there are several ways that you can download an image from a Google Doc (short of using a third-party app). None of them are obvious, but none are really difficult, either. Here they are.
This is, IMO, the easiest way to go.
The easiest way is to download the document as a zipped HTML file.
This is a little more roundabout than the first method, but it works.
Click on the Publish button to get a link to a web page version of your document.
Weirdly, although you can’t download images from Google Docs, you can download them from Google’s note app, Keep. So here’s the third alternative.
After you’ve sent an image to Keep (it’s in the sidebar on the left here) you can then save it to your computer via the right-click menu.