Looking for an application which can add effects to your photos on your Mac?Well, there is one named iPhoto Batch Enhancer! This free application allows you to apply iPhoto effects to an array of pictures with only few steps. Yeah! With this free tool, you can add effects like, sepia, black, white, matte and more! You can also change the brightness, saturation, shadows, rotate, scale and more fuc
Since I'm working on improving on photography skills, some of my first shots didn't turned out as expected, especially after downloading into my Macbook. But all thanks to iPhoto editing tools, I could play with it and derive some fun effects... like I said, my model isn't charging so I can do whatever I want for NOW - lol!
When you click the Edit button with an image selected in iPhoto, the internal editor opens. If you’d like to use a different image editor when clicking edit, follow the steps outlined below.
Open iPhoto and select iPhoto -> Preferences… from the main menu.
On the General tab, select drop-down menu next to [...]
Dopo avervi segnalato qualche giorno fa un utility sviluppata con tecnologia Adobe Air che permetteva di scaricare tutte le foto di un determinato utente da Flickr, oggi voglio parlarvi di un applicazione per Mac OS X che lavorerà al contrario.
Infatt
Vista 402 volte da 32 visitatori Armatevi di due click: MELA -> Aggiornamento software, e troverete disponibili i 3 aggiornamenti per Iphoto, Ilife e Imovie.
Mentre gli ultimi 2 sono perlopiù (soliti) bugfix, Iphoto (oltre ai soliti bufix ) ci regala nuovi temi per i biglietti di auguri e le cartoline postali [...]
onOne Software, Inc., announces today the availability of Essentials 2 software for iPhoto users. Essentials 2 for iPhoto is a collection of four easy-to-use software tools to help correct color, creatively blur a photo for dramatic visual impact, add creative borders and resize digital images for high quality large prints. The software tools included within Essentials 2 for iPhoto are based on te
These are instructions on how to publish your iPhoto pictures to a Web Gallery. In order to use this feature you must have a .Mac membership.Step OneLaunch iPhoto by selecting its icon in the dockStep TwoSelect an album or event from the iPhoto library. Step ThreeSelect Web Gallery from the Share Menu.Step FourIf you have not signed in to .Mac on this computer you will be prompted to do so. Click the Sign In button Enter your dotMac Member Name and Password then click the Sign In button.Step FiveSelect Web Gallery from the Share Menu again if required.Step SixSelect who can view the album from the Album Viewable by: dropdown. You can select Everyone, Only me, or you can create a user list by clicking Edit Names and Passwords.... You can add users by clicking the + button. Click the OK butt
Se non volete utilizzare il pesante iPhoto per visualizzare immagini in una cartella (ad esempio se sono immagini che non volete importare nella libreria), e l’applicazione Preview non vi soddisfa, esiste un visualizzatore di immagini a schermo intero completamente gratuito: Sequential. Permette di visualizzare immagini tratte da cartelle, file zip o da Internet ovviamente in [...]
You’ve just finished a shoot of an incredibly colourful festival in Bangladesh, or you’ve been busy taking pictures of your family with your new digital SLR.
What do you do with the 200-plus frames you’ve taken at the end of day? Without editing and choosing your best photos, you will never evaluate what worked and what didn’t, and that makes it much harder to improve your photography.
The good news is that Mac OS X’s bundled iPhoto program makes this process easier and faster, but most people don’t know how to use the program effectively. Once you take a few preliminary steps, you’ll be more ready to show and broadcast your best work to the world.
1) iPhoto Library Manager: a must-have tool for iPhoto
The newer and more affordable digital SLR cameras have created a new photographic explosion—quality photography has never before been in the reach of so many people.
The flip side is that the file sizes of the resulting photographs can clog up you
Apple iPhoto Software Tutorial : How to Import Pictures to iPhoto from Photo Booth1 min - Nov 27, 2007Learn how to import pictures from Photo Booth to Apple iPhoto photo editing program in this free Mac software tutorial video.
Apple iPhoto Software Tutorial : How to Use the Calendar to Find Pictures in iPhoto2 min - Nov 27, 2007Learn how to use calendar to find pictures in Apple iPhoto photo editing program in this free Mac software tutorial video.
Nueva actualización para el gestor de fotografías en Mac de iLife 0′08.
iPhoto 7.1.1 ofrece compatibilidad con Mac OS X 10.5, mejora la estabilidad global de la aplicación y corrige una serie de pequeños problemas de menor importancia.
Mas información:
iPhoto 7.1.1
iPhoto + .Mac + iPhone = pretty cool syncing of photos to and from your handset and desktop. Couple of things not addressed in the video: a) images sent from the iPhone are actually sent using the mail program, to your gallery's specific email address, and so images are 640 by 480. When you sync them from .mac to iPhoto, they're this size, and when you sync images by docking, it'll dupe your images instead of replacing the smaller copy. But I am astounded by how fast the system works.
I want to get the most out of my photographs! Scrapbooking family memories with an Apple is a piece of cake, but how do I make the photos look their best? When my pictures reach iPhoto they can be tilted, blurred, overexposed, afflicted with red eye, the list goes on… Well, there are things we can do inside the camera to reduce the amount of problems with our photos. Here is a basic tutorial about good photo composition.
First, let’s review the basics of editing photos in iPhoto. To edit any photo, double click the photo in Library view. A window like the one below will appear.
Any change I make to the photograph will be automatically saved once I click Done or move onto another photo in my Library. If I make a change to the photograph I do not like just Undo or hit Cmd+Z. I can not undo the changes once I click Done or move to another photo. iPhoto keeps the original image stored on my Mac. When I make a change, iPhoto creates a whole new image in the Modified folder i
Importing images from my camera is so easy! All I need is my digital camera, USB cable, and the application iPhoto to be open to import photos automatically to my Mac. This method should work with pretty much any consumer or professional camera on the market including Kodak, Canon, Nikon, FujiFilm, and even more.
Open iPhoto. If iPhoto is not in the Dock, I can find it by opening the Finder and navigating to the Applications folder.
Connect the smaller end of the USB cable to my camera. The bigger end goes into my Mac.
Wait a few seconds. iPhoto will respond by displaying a black window asking if I want to import the photos from my camera.Click Import. This may take a few minutes. A progress bar will appear at the bottom of the iPhoto window and a thumbnail of each image will appear as I import them. That’s all there is to it!
Now I can organize the photos in Photo and view them individually or even make a slide show with Audio!
iPhoto places imported images into a specific fold
There is a simple way to speed up iPhoto considerably, especially if you are running it on an old machine. Open up iPhoto and go to the Preferences. Choose Appearance. If you uncheck Outline and Drop shadow, then slide the background all the way to white, you should notice that iPhoto starts up a lot quicker. This mainly helps with iPhoto 5's performance, as iPhoto 6 is already much snappier.If you still find iPhoto to be slow, try holding down the command and option keys while its starting up. A diolog box should load up, asking if you want to rebuild your photo library. This has the greatest effect if you have a very large photo libary.One final tip is to press 0, 1 or 2 while in your library. This sets your photos to one of the 3 default sizes, which load a lot quicker than the custom sizes you get when dragging the slider.Now your iPhoto library should scroll like butter!