Chapter 14
In This Chapter
Importing pictures from your hard drive or digital camera
Organizing images with iPhoto
Tweaking the appearance of photographs
Sharing photos with your friends
Do you still own a camera that uses real film? (Heck, have you ever seen a film camera?) The digital camera has reached the pinnacle that those funny (strange) marketing people refer to as saturation (virtually everyone owns one or a smartphone that sports a built-in camera), and iPhoto was written to address the needs of every person with a digital camera and an iMac!
With iPhoto, you organize, edit, and even publish your photographs. (It sports more features than a handful of Swiss Army knives.) After you shoot your photos with a digital camera (or even scan images from original film prints or negatives), you can import them into iPhoto, edit them, and publish them. You’re not limited to photos that you take yourself, either; you can edit, share, and organize all kinds of digital image files. You can even create a photo album and use the iPhoto interface to order a handsome hardbound copy shipped to you, or create a slideshow that you copy to a USB flash drive.
To sum it all up, I’m willing to bet that iPhoto is either the first or the second iLife application that you fall in love with (running neck and neck with iTunes). In this chapter, I show you how you can work digital image magic with true Apple panache!
In Figure 14-1, you can see most of the major controls offered in iPhoto. (Other controls automatically appear when you enter different modes; I cover them in upcoming sections of this chapter.)
Although these controls and sections of the window are covered in more detail in the following sections, here’s a quick rundown of what you’re looking at when you first launch iPhoto:
Right-click in any empty part of the Source list to add a new blank album, book, or slideshow to your Source list.
You can drag or click to select photos in the Viewer for further tricks, such as assigning keywords and image editing.
Even a superbly designed image display and editing application such as iPhoto would look overwhelming if everything were jammed into one window. Thus, Apple’s developers provide different operational modes (such as editing and book creation) that you can use in the one iPhoto window. Each mode allows you to perform different tasks, and you can switch modes at just about any time by clicking the corresponding toolbar button.
In this section, I discuss three of these modes — import, organize, and edit — and what you can do when you’re in them. Then I conclude the chapter with sections on publishing and sharing your images.
In import mode, you’re ready to download images directly from your digital camera — as long as your specific camera model is supported in iPhoto. To find many of the cameras that are supported in iPhoto, visit the Apple iPhoto support page:
www.apple.com/macosx/upgrade/cameras.html
And you’re not limited to cameras, of course: You can also import photos from a memory card reader (such as the SDXC card slot sported by your iMac) or even a Kodak PhotoCD.
Follow these steps to import images:
Plug one end of a USB cable into your camera and the other end into your iMac’s USB port.
The procedure for downloading images varies by camera, but the process usually involves turning the camera on and choosing a “Download” or “PC” mode. Check your camera’s user guide for more details.
Your iMac will probably launch iPhoto automatically when your camera is detected, but you can always launch iPhoto manually by clicking its icon on the Dock (or double-clicking it in your Applications folder).
Depending on your birthday parties, this could be the same event.
The images are added to your Photo Library, where you can organize them as you want.
To select specific images to import, hold down the key and click each desired photo; then click Import Selected instead of Import All.
Depending on the camera, iPhoto may also import video clips.
If you don’t expect to download these images again to another computer or another device, you can choose to delete the photos from your camera automatically. This saves you a step, frees space for new photos, and helps eliminate the guilt that can crop up when you nix your pix. (Sorry, I couldn’t resist.)
“What’s that about an Event, Mark?” After you download the contents of your digital camera, those contents count as a virtual Event in iPhoto — based on either the date that you imported them or the date they were taken. For example, you can always display the last images you imported by clicking Last Import. If you want to see photos from your son’s graduation, they appear as a separate Event. (Events and Last Import will both appear in the Source list.) Think about that… . It’s pretty tough to arrange old-fashioned film prints by the moment in time that they document, but iPhoto makes it easy for you to see just which photos are part of the same group! I explain more about Events in the next section.
In the days of film prints, you could always stuff another shoebox with your latest photos or buy another sticky album to expand your library. Your digital camera, though, stores images as files instead, and many folks don’t print their digital photographs. Instead, you can keep your entire collection of digital photographs and scanned images well ordered and easily retrieved by using iPhoto’s organize mode. Then you can display them in a slideshow, e-mail them, print them, use them as Desktop backgrounds, or burn them to an archive disc.
The most familiar method of organizing images in iPhoto is the album. Each album can represent any designation you like, be it a year, a vacation, your daughter, or your daughter’s ex-boyfriends. Follow these steps:
You can choose File⇒New Album, press +N, or right-click in the Source list and choose New Album. (You can see right-click menu in Figure 14-2.) If you’ve selected any image thumbnails in the Viewer, they’ll be automatically added to the new album. If you don’t have any photos selected, you get a funky dialog asking whether you’re sure you want to create an empty album, and then you have to click Continue.
iPhoto creates the new album entry in the Source list as an editing text box.
iPhoto also offers a special type of album called a Smart Album, which you can create from the File menu. (For even faster action, press Option++N.) If you’re familiar with the Smart Folders you can use within the Finder and the Smart Playlists within iTunes (see Chapter 13), you’ve figured this one out already. A Smart Album contains only photos that match certain criteria that you choose, including the keywords and rating that you assign your images. Other criteria include text in the photo filenames, dates the images were added to iPhoto, and any comments you might have added (as well as camera-specific data, such as ISO and shutter speed). Now here’s the really nifty angle: iPhoto automatically builds and maintains Smart Albums for you, adding new photos that match the criteria and deleting those that you remove from your Photo Library (as well as removing the photos that no longer match the Smart Album’s criteria)! Smart Album icons carry a gear symbol in the Source list.
You can display information about the currently selected item in the information pane at the far right of the window. Just click the Info button at the bottom of the iPhoto window, which sports the familiar “i-in-a-circle” logo. You can also type a short note or description in the Add a Description box that appears in the Info pane, or add keywords to help you organize your photos.
You can drag images from the Viewer into any album you choose. For example, you can copy an image to another album by dragging it from the Viewer to the desired album in the Source list.
To remove a photo that has fallen out of favor, follow these steps:
To remove an entire album from the Source list, just click it in the Source list to select it — in the Viewer, you can see the images that it contains — and then press Delete. (Alternatively, right-click the offending album and choose Delete Album.)
To rename an album, click the entry under the Albums heading in the Source list to select it and then click again to display a text box. Type the new album name and then press Return.
As I mention earlier, an Event is a group of images that you shot or downloaded at the same time. iPhoto assumes that those images belong together (which is usually a pretty safe assumption). Figure 14-3 illustrates some of the Events I’ve created in my iPhoto collection.
Try moving your cursor over an Event thumbnail in the Viewer, and you’ll see that iPhoto displays the date range when the images were taken, as well as the total number of images in the Event. Ah, but things get really cool when you move your cursor back and forth over an Event with many images: The thumbnail animates and displays all the images in the Event! (Why can’t I think of this stuff? This is the future, dear readers.)
To display the contents of an Event in the Viewer, just double-click the Event thumbnail. To return to the Events thumbnails, click the All Events button at the top of the Viewer.
iPhoto includes two organizational tools: Faces and Places. These two categories appear in the Library section of the Source list.
First, tackle Faces. (Ouch. Don’t literally tackle anyone’s face, dear reader.) Faces is a sophisticated recognition system that automatically recognizes human faces within the photos that you add to your Library. (I don’t know whether it works well with pets — but you can try, anyway.) Naturally, you have to identify — tag — faces before iPhoto can recognize them.
To tag a face, follow these steps:
The photo is selected, as indicated by the yellow border.
iPhoto displays the Info pane you see in Figure 14-4.
Note that iPhoto has indicated each person’s face in the photo with a label. If a face has already been tagged, the label will match the person’s face.
If the name appears on a Contacts contact card — or is recognized as one of your Facebook friends — you can click the matching entry that appears to confirm the identity. Wowzers!
To delete a Face recognition box that isn’t necessary, hover your cursor over the box and click the X button that appears at the top-left corner of the box.
If iPhoto doesn’t recognize the face at all in the photo (which can happen if the person’s face is turned at an angle to the camera, or is in a darker area of the photo), click the box border and drag the box over the person’s face. If necessary, you can resize the box using the four handles at the corner of the box. Now you can click the label and type the person’s name.
After you tag an image, it appears in your Faces collection, which you can view by clicking the Faces entry in the Source list. You can double-click a portrait in your Faces collection to see all the images that contain that person.
As you might expect, the more photos you add for a specific person, the better iPhoto gets at recognizing that person!
Places makes it easy to track the location where photos were taken, but it requires a digital camera that includes GPS tracking information in the image metadata for iPhoto to do so without your help. (This is a relatively new feature for digital cameras, so older models aren’t likely to support GPS tracking. Naturally, both the iPhone and the 3G/4G iPad support this feature.) Places also requires an Internet connection because it uses Google Maps.
Click the Places entry in the Source list to display a global map, with pushpins indicating where your photos were taken. You can switch the Places map between terrain and satellite modes, or choose a hybrid display. If you’re familiar with Google Maps, these settings are old friends of yours.
If you click a specific photo (that includes location information) to select it and then click the Info button, you’ll see a close-up map of the location where the photo was taken.
Alternatively, click the text Location buttons at the top of the map to display a character-based browser, where you can click country, state, city, and place names.
No matter which view mode you choose, clicking a pushpin or location displays the images taken in that area.
“Okay, Mark, albums, Events, Faces, and Places are great ideas, but there has to be a way to search my collection by category!” Never fear, good iMac owner. You can also assign descriptive keywords to images to help you organize your collection and locate certain pictures fast. iPhoto comes with a number of standard keywords, and you can create your own as well.
To illustrate, suppose you’d like to identify your images according to special events in your family. Birthday photos should have their own keyword, and anniversaries deserve another. By assigning keywords, you can search for Elsie’s sixth birthday or your silver wedding anniversary (no matter what Event or album they’re in), and all related photos with those keywords appear like magic! (Well, almost like magic. You need to choose View⇒Keywords, which toggles the Keyword display in the Viewer.)
iPhoto includes a number of keywords that are already available:
To assign keywords to images (or remove keywords that have already been assigned), select one or more photos in the Viewer. Choose Window⇒Manage My Keywords or press +K to display the Keywords window, as shown in Figure 14-5.
Click the buttons for the keywords that you want to attach to the selected images to mark them. Or click the highlighted keyword buttons that you want to remove from the selected images to disable them.
Behold the power of keywords! To sift through your entire collection of images by using keywords, click the Search button on the toolbar at the bottom of the iPhoto window, click the magnifying glass icon at the left side of the Search box, and choose Keyword from the pop-up menu. iPhoto displays a pop-up Keywords panel, and you can click one or more keyword buttons to display just the photos that carry those keywords.
Speaking of ratings …
Be your own critic! iPhoto allows you to assign any photo a rating of anywhere from zero to five stars. I use this system to help me keep track of the images that I feel are the best in my library. Select one (or more) image and then assign a rating using one of the following methods:
The View menu provides an easy way to arrange your images in the Viewer by a number of different criteria. Choose View⇒Sort Photos and then click the desired sort criteria from the pop-up submenu. You can arrange the display by date, keyword, title, or rating. If you select an album in the Source list, you can also choose to arrange photos manually, which means that you can drag and drop thumbnails in the Viewer to place them in the precise order you want them.
Not every digital image is perfect — just look at my collection if you need proof. For those shots that need a pixel massage, iPhoto includes a number of editing tools that you can use to correct common problems.
The first step in any editing job is to select the image you want to fix in the Viewer. Then click the Edit button on the iPhoto toolbar to display the Edit mode controls at the right side of the window, as shown in Figure 14-6. Now you’re ready to fix problems, using the tools that I discuss in the rest of this section. (If you’re editing a photo that’s part of an Event, album, Faces, or Places, note the spiffy scrolling photo strip at the bottom, which allows you to switch to another image to edit from the same grouping.) Note that iPhoto always displays the Quick Fixes tab when you first enter Edit mode.
While you’re editing, you can use the Next and Previous buttons at the left of the tab button to move to the next image in the current group (or back to the previous image).
When you’re done with Edit mode, click the (wait for it …) Edit button again to return to the Viewer!
If an image is in the wrong orientation and needs to be turned to display correctly, click the Rotate button to turn it once in a counterclockwise direction. Hold down the Option key while you click the Rotate button to rotate in a clockwise direction.
Does that photo have an intruder hovering around the edges of the subject? You can remove some of the border by cropping an image, just as folks once did with film prints and a pair of scissors. (We’ve come a long way.) With iPhoto, you can remove unwanted portions from the edges of an image; it’s a great way to get Uncle Milton’s stray head (complete with toupee) out of an otherwise perfect holiday snapshot.
Follow these steps to crop an image:
In the Viewer, click and drag the handles on the rectangle to outline the part of the image that you want. Remember that whatever is outside this rectangle disappears after the crop is completed.
When you drag a corner or edge of the outline, a semi-opaque grid (familiar to amateur and professional photographers as the nine rectangles from the Rule of Thirds) appears to help you visualize what you’re claiming. (Check it out in Figure 14-7.)
You can expand the outline to the full dimensions of the image at any time by just clicking the Reset button.
If you want to force your cropped selection to a specific aspect ratio — say. 4 x 3 or 16 x 9 for a widescreen desktop background, or 4 x 6 or 5 x 7 to match the dimensions of photo paper — click select the Constrain check box and then select that ratio from the Constrain pop-up menu.
Oh, and don’t forget that you can use iPhoto’s Undo feature if you mess up and need to try again. Just press +Z.
Was your camera slightly tilted when you took the perfect shot? Never fear! Click the Straighten button and then drag the Angle slider to tilt the image in the desired direction. Click the Done button to return to Edit mode.
If a photo looks washed out, click the Enhance button to increase (or decrease) the color saturation and improve the contrast. Enhance is automatic, so you don’t have to set anything — but be prepared to use Undo if you’re not satisfied with the changes.
Unfortunately, today’s digital cameras can still produce the same “zombies with red eyeballs” as traditional film cameras. Red-eye is caused by a camera’s flash reflecting off the retinas of a subject’s eyes, and it can occur with both humans and animals. (I’m told pets get green-eye or blue-eye, but iPhoto can handle them, too!)
iPhoto can remove that red-eye and green-eye and turn frightening zombies back into your family and friends! Click the Fix Red-Eye button and then select a demonized eyeball by clicking in the center of it. (If the Red-Eye circular cursor is too small or too large, drag the Size slider to adjust the dimensions.) To complete the process, click the Done button.
The iPhoto Retouch feature is perfect for removing minor flecks or lines in an image (especially those you’ve scanned from prints). Click Retouch, and notice that the cursor turns into a circle; as with the Red-Eye tool, you can drag the Size slider to change the size of the Retouch cursor. Just drag the cursor across the imperfection and click Done when you’re finished touching things up. Don’t forget to take a moment and marvel at your editing skill!
Ever wonder whether a particular photo in your library would look better as a black-and-white (grayscale) print? Or perhaps an old-fashioned sepia tone in shades of copper and brown? Just click the Effects tab, which offers nine different effects that you can apply to the photo. You can also make “one-click” changes to your photo from the Effects tab, including lightening and darkening an image or enhancing the contrast.
Click the Adjust tab to perform very precise manual adjustments to brightness and contrast (the light levels in your image) as well as attributes such as sharpness, shadow, and highlight levels. To adjust a value, make sure that nothing’s selected in the image and then drag the corresponding slider until the image looks the way you want. Click the Close button to return to Edit mode.
Book mode unleashes what I think is probably the coolest feature of iPhoto: the chance to design and print a high-quality bound photo book! After you complete an album — all the images have been edited just the way you want, and the album contains all the photos you want to include in your book — iPhoto can send your images as data over the Internet to a company that prints and binds your finished book for you. (No, they don’t publish For Dummies titles, but then again, I don’t get high-resolution color plates in most of my books, either.)
At the time of this writing, you can order many different sizes and bindings. The largest size is a 13" x 10" hardcover book with 20 double-sided pages for about $50 (extra pages cost $1.50 each). Smaller sizes include an 8.5" x 11" softcover book with 20 double-sided pages for about $20 and a hardcover 8.5" x 11" album with 20 double-sided pages for about $30 (shipping included for both). Extra pages can be added at $0.70 and $1.00 a pop, respectively.
iPhoto can also produce and automatically order calendars and cards (both the postal and greeting varieties), using a process similar to the one I describe in this section for producing a book. Who needs that stationery store in the mall anymore? (You can even order old-fashioned prints from the Share toolbar menu.)
To create a photo book, follow these steps:
Make sure that no individual photos are selected in the Viewer. This way, iPhoto uses all the images in the chosen location.
Your choices determine the number of pages and the size of the book.
Use the left- and right-arrow keys to cycle through the theme selections. The theme you choose determines both the layout scheme and the background graphics for each page. To change the color scheme for a theme, click one of the color swatches at the right side of the window.
iPhoto adds your new book project under the Projects heading in the Source list (using the name of the album or event where the photos were located), and you see the controls shown in Figure 14-8.
In Book mode, the Viewer displays a collection of thumbnail images, each of which represents a portion of your book — the front cover, internal pages, or back cover. To display the photos you selected, click the Photos button on the toolbar at the bottom right of the window. You can drag any image thumbnail into one of the photo placeholders to add it to the page.
It’s easy to switch to another theme at any time by clicking the Change Theme button at the top right of the window.
If you’d prefer a book without page numbers, right-click any page and choose Show Page Numbers to toggle it off. (The Show Page Numbers menu item turns gray to indicate that it’s disabled.)
Clicking a design thumbnail automatically updates the page display.
Click any one of the text boxes in the page display and begin typing to add text to that page. Note: Some themes don’t have caption or description text boxes.
After you’re done editing, click the All Pages button at the top of the window to return to your full spread.
As I mention earlier, the price for additional pages varies according to the size and type of binding you choose.
After a short wait, the OS X Preview application opens, and you can scroll through the contents of your book (or even print a quick copy). To close the Preview window, choose Preview⇒Quit Preview.
Note that you’ll be asked for credit card information, so have that plastic ready.
iPhoto includes the Photo Stream feature that automatically shares the photos you take among your iMac, your PC, and any Apple device running iOS 5.0 or later (which includes your iPhone 4 or later, your second or later-generation iPad, and your iPod touch). Click Share and choose Photo Stream, and iPhoto automatically sends the selected images to all compatible devices over your Wi-Fi connection. (Note that all devices using Photo Stream must be configured using the same Apple ID.)
To turn on Photo Stream, choose iPhoto⇒Preferences and click the iCloud toolbar button. Then select the My Photo Stream check box.
Optionally, you can also specify whether iPhoto should automatically import Photo Stream photos to you library and also whether iPhoto should automatically upload the most recent 1,000 photos to Photo Stream for sharing with your other devices.
You can also choose to share specific photos by using shared photo streams, which can be turned on from the iPhoto Preferences dialog. Choose iPhoto⇒Preferences, click the iCloud tab on the toolbar, and select the Photo Sharing check box.
To subscribe to a shared photo stream invitation from another person, click the iCloud entry in the Source list, click the desired shared stream entry, and then click Accept.
To create your own shared photo stream, select the images you want to share, click the Share button on the toolbar, click the iCloud button, and then click the New Photo Stream menu item that appears. iPhoto prompts you for the e-mail addresses of the folks you want to invite to your shared photo stream. After each e-mail address has been entered, click the Share button in the dialog to start the ball rolling.
iPhoto can help you send your images through e-mail by automating the process. The application can prepare your image and embed it automatically in a new message. (In fact, you don’t even have to open Apple Mail because everything is done within iPhoto.)
To send an image through e-mail, select it and click the Share button on the toolbar; then click the Mail menu item. (You can select up to ten images if you hold down the key while clicking.) The layout shown in Figure 14-9 appears, allowing you to choose a theme for your message (complete with a background image and matching font selection). You can also specify the size of the images from the Photo Size pop-up menu, which can save considerable downloading time for those recipients who are still using a dialup connection. To add the images as attachments to the message, select the Attach Photos to Message check box.
When you’re satisfied with the total file size and the theme, click within the To field and enter the recipient’s e-mail address. Then click the Subject field and enter a title for the message. To add your own text to the message, double-click the theme’s default text and begin typing.
When everything is perfect, click Send. iPhoto takes care of the rest!