Featured Photo Tutorials
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iPhoto
Aperture 2
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Quickly Organize All Your Photos
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Importing Photos
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Organizing Photos Using Events
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Creating an Album
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Adding Titles, Descriptions, Rating and Keywords
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Finding Photos
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View and Enjoy Your Photos
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Reviewing and Comparing Photos
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Creating a Slideshow
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Improving Your Photos
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Improving the Appearance of Photos
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Cropping a Photo
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Sharing Your Photos
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Creating a Web Gallery
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Sharing by Email
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Creating Photo Gifts and Keepsakes
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Printing Your Photos
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Creating a Card
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Creating a Book
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Creating a Calendar
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Getting Photos into iPhoto
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Connect Your Camera to Your Mac
Connect Your Camera to Your Mac
Once you’ve shot some photos with your digital camera, you need to move them from your camera into iPhoto. This is easy on a Mac and requires no additional software.
- Connect your digital camera to your Mac using the USB cable supplied with your camera.
- Turn on your camera and iPhoto automatically displays all the photos stored on your camera.
To import all the photos on your camera:
- Click the Import All button in the lower-right corner of the iPhoto window.
To import just a few of the photos on your camera:
- In iPhoto’s viewing pane, click the first photo you want to import. To select a range of photos, hold down the Command key and click the next photo you want to import.
- When all the photos you want are selected, click the Import Selected button in the lower-right corner of the main iPhoto window.
When the import finishes, turn off your camera and disconnect it from your Mac. Capture images on flash cards? Simply connect a card reader to your Mac, insert a card, and iPhoto takes over from there.
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Importing Video from a Digital Camera
Importing Video from a Digital Camera
Many digital cameras let you capture video as well as still images. As you’ll see in the Movies section of Find Out How, iMovie can use the digital video that you import quite readily.
To import video from your digital camera, the steps are the same as importing still photos.
- Connect your camera to your Mac and turn your camera on.
- iPhoto displays the items that you can import in the viewing pane. Video thumbnails have a small white camera icon in their lower-left corners.
- Either select the video you want to import and click Import Selected, or click Import All to import everything in the camera.
iPhoto adds the imported items to your iPhoto Library. Videos in the library display the small white camera icon. To find out how to make a movie with iMovie, click here.
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Adding Other Photos to iPhoto Library
Adding Other Photos to iPhoto Library
iPhoto can import photo and image files in a variety of formats, which make it useful for storing and arranging images other than those that come from your digital camera. For example, you can import photos emailed to you from friends and family.
To add any photo or image on your Mac to your iPhoto Library, do the following:
- Open iPhoto. The viewing pane should display your iPhoto Library.
- Find the photo you’d like to add to your iPhoto Library. Click and drag that photo into your iPhoto Library window; then release the mouse button. The photo automatically becomes a new Event item.
- You can do the same with entire folders of photos. Just find the folder full of photos on your Mac, then click and drag that folder into the iPhoto Library pane.
Arranging Your Photos
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Viewing Photos
Viewing Photos
When you view the Events in your iPhoto Library, iPhoto uses a thumbnail of one of the photos in the Event to represent all the photos in that Event. To adjust the size of these thumbnails:
- Open iPhoto, and the Events pane should appear. (If you’re already in iPhoto, click Events at the top of the source list on the left.)
- To change the size of the thumbnail images, locate the magnifying slider at the bottom right of the iPhoto Window. To make the thumbnails smaller or larger, drag the magnifying slider to the left or right.
Use this same technique to change the size of thumbnail images within each Event, as well.
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Splitting Events
Splitting Events
iPhoto automatically creates Events when you import pictures, based on when the pictures were taken. (Most digital cameras automatically assign a Date/Time Stamp to photos.) Often, you’ll find that photos within one iPhoto Event actually represent two or more real events. You may want to split a single Event into two or more Events, and rename them.
To split an Event:
- Open the Event.
- Select all the Photos that you’d like to be part of the New Event.
- At the bottom-left of the viewing pane, click the Split button. iPhoto creates a new Untitled Event that contains the pictures you selected, removing them from the original Event.
- You can now double-click the untitled Event’s title to rename it.
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Merging Events
Merging Events
Sometimes, when importing your photos, iPhoto splits them into multiple Events even though they all belong in a single event. For example, iPhoto may place the photos shot during the three days of your tropical vacation into three events. But you can easily merge them into one. Here’s how:
- Select the two or more Events you’d like to merge.
- At the bottom-left of the viewing pane, click the Merge button.
- You can also Merge Events simply by dragging and dropping one Event onto another.
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Using Keywords to Search
Using Keywords to Search
Once you have a lot of photos in your iPhoto Library, you’ll want a way to find them fast. And iPhoto makes that easy with Keywords. After assigning keywords to your photos — such as vacation or Mother — you can find them quickly weeks or months later by searching iPhoto by keyword. Here’s how:
- Open any of the Events in your iPhoto Library.
- Choose View > Keywords or press Command-Shift-K.
- Choose Windows > Show Keywords. A Keywords window appears above the iPhoto window. It already has several keywords available, but you’re going to add a custom one.
- At the bottom-left of the Keywords window, click Edit Keywords. The window changes appearance to provide a scrolling list of keywords that you can edit.
- At the bottom-left of the window, click the “+” button. A new entry appears at the bottom of the keywords list, ready for you to customise.
- Type a keyword—a friend's name, perhaps. The new keyword appears in the Quick Group section of the window.
- Now, go back to your Event and select the photos you’d like to associate with this keyword. Then, click the appropriate Keyword button in the Quick Group area. The pictures all have that keyword assigned to them.
In the future, when you’d like to find a specific photo, just go to the Search field, choose Keyword from the field’s pop-up menu, and select a Keyword button to find associated photos.
Editing Your Photos
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Rotating and Straightening Photos
Rotating and Straightening Photos
If you import a photo and it appears in your library incorrectly oriented, iPhoto makes it really easy to change its orientation. Here’s how:
- Click the photo you’d like to rotate.
- On the bottom-left of the viewing pane, click the Rotate button. Click it one to three times to achieve the proper orientation for your photo.
Sometimes, however, even if a photo is rotated properly, it may be slightly askew. You can straighten these photos with iPhoto’s Straighten Tool.
- Click the picture that you would like to straighten.
- Click the Edit button at the bottom of the viewing pane.
- In the editing pane’s toolbar, click the Straighten button. The Straighten Tool panel appears over the editing pane, and a grid of yellow lines is superimposed on the picture.
- Drag the slider in the Straighten panel to the left or right to adjust your photo. In many cases, aligning the horizon within your photo parallel to one of the yellow horizontal grid lines may work well.
- Click the close button at the left side of the Straighten panel and you’re done.
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Removing Red-eye from Photos
Removing Red-eye from Photos
If you take photos of your friends at night while using your camera’s flash, you may need to use the Red-eye tool to remove the red spots on your friends’ eyes.
- Click on the picture you’d like to edit.
- Click the Edit button at the bottom of the viewing pane.
- Slide the magnifying slider at the bottom of the iPhoto window far enough to the right to allow you to see the eyes of the image in detail.
- Click the Red-eye button in the editing pane toolbar. A Red-eye Tool panel appears over the editing pane. Your cursor becomes a crosshairs icon.
- Place the crosshairs icon over one of the red spots on an eye, and click. The red spot turns black.
- Repeat this process for the other eye.
Publishing Your Photos
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Sharing Photos Over a Network
Sharing Photos Over a Network
One simple and safe way to share photos with your friends and family uses your local network, including a Wi-Fi network that you might set up with an AirPort Extreme.
To share photos from your iPhoto Library over a network:
- Choose iPhoto > Preferences. iPhoto’s Preference Window opens.
- In the window’s toolbar, click the Sharing button. The iPhoto Preferences window displays its Sharing pane.
- Click the “Share my photos” checkbox. You can share all the photos in your library or just the pictures in albums that you select.
- If you’d like, you can name how your photos will appear to other networked Users by typing a name into the “Shared name:” text field.
- For extra security, you can password-protect your photos by clicking the “Require password:” checkbox, and entering a password in the password field. When you do this, other networked Users can still see that you are sharing photos, but they won’t be able to view your photos unless they enter the password when prompted.
- Close the Preferences window.
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Viewing Shared Photos Over a Network
Viewing Shared Photos Over a Network
To view another person’s shared photos over a network, make sure you have Sharing turned on:
- Choose iPhoto > Preferences.
- Click the Sharing button in the Preferences window toolbar.
- If the “Look for shared photos” is not checked, click it.
- That’s it. Now when you open iPhoto a Shares heading will appear in the Source List menu on the left, and the names of the shared photo collections will appear below it.
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Using Photo Descriptions
Using Photo Descriptions
You can assign a description to any photo in your iPhoto Library, and this description will automatically appear as a photo caption when you add the photo to a Web Gallery or Photo Book.
To add a description to a photo:
- Click a photo in your iPhoto Library.
- Click the Information button (represented by an “i” icon) on the lower left of the viewing pane to have iPhoto display the pop-up Information pane.
- Click the greyed-out word “description” within the Information pane, and type the description of the photo.
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Introduction
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Exploring the Interface
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Customising the Keyboard
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Organize
Importing
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Importing Basics
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Tethering
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Using Aperture and iPhoto Together
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Compare and Select
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Making Multiple Selections
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Using the Loupe Tools
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Using the Zoom Tool
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Using Quick Preview
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Using the Sort Tool
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Applying Ratings
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Using Compare Mode
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Using Stacks
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Using Stack Mode
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Assigning Keywords
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Viewing Multiple Displays
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Searching and Sorting
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Filtering and Searching in Aperture
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Skimming All Projects
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Organizing
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Creating Albums and Smart Albums
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Using Light Tables
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Adjust
Image Editing
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Using RAW Fine Tuning
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Cropping and Straightening
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Adjusting White Balance
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Adjusting Exposure
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Recovering Highlights
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Enhancing Your Images
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Setting Levels
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Setting Advanced Levels
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Adjusting Highlights and Shadows
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Improving Color
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Using the Retouch Brush
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Applying Vignette and Devignette
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Applying Black & White and Color Effects
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Sharpening Images
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Using Lift and Stamp
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Metadata
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Editing Metadata
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Adjusting Date and Time
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Embedding and Exporting Metadata
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Publish
Output
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Exporting Versions, Masters, and Projects
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Making Prints and Contact sheets
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Making Books
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Creating Web Pages
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Creating Web Galleries
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Creating Slideshows
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Using Export Plug-ins
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Presets
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Exploring Presets
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Integration
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Using Aperture and iPhoto Together
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Creating Advanced Slideshows with Keynote
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Making Photo Movies with iMovie
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Accessing Aperture through Leopard
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Managing and Organizing
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Importing Photos from Your Hard Drive
Importing Photos from Your Hard Drive
If you already have your photos organized into folders and subfolders on your hard drive, you can save yourself a lot of time by importing multiple folders into Aperture at once. Aperture will even preserve the folder hierarchy you’ve created, so that everything stays organized.
- In the Projects pane, click the Library icon.
- From the File menu, choose Import > Folders as Projects.
- An Import dialogue appears. Select the folder you want to import into Aperture. You can Command-click to select multiple folders. Each folder you select will become a project in Aperture. If the folders you select contain subfolders of photos, those will be imported too.
- Use the Store Files pop-up menu to determine where you want Aperture to put your imported photos. Choose “in their current location” if you don’t want Aperture to duplicate your photos. With this option, your image files stay where they are and Aperture simply references them — saving you disk space. If you choose “in the Aperture Library,” your photos will be copied (duplicated) when imported.
POWER TIP: You can also drag-and-drop folders directly into the Aperture Projects pane for fast, easy import. Hold down the Command and Option keys while dropping a folder into the Projects pane to reference the images, so that they’re not duplicated on import.
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Navigating: The Five Essential Shortcuts
Navigating: The Five Essential Shortcuts
Keyboard shortcuts make navigating through your photos faster and easier. Here are five of the simplest and most useful shortcuts. Learning these five one-key shortcuts can save you a lot of time.
- V
- Cycles through the three main view modes — Browser Only (just thumbnails), Viewer Only (big photo, no thumbnails), and Browser and Viewer (a split view, with thumbnails on the bottom and the Viewer above).
- W
- Switches to the next pane in the Inspector — Projects, Metadata, or Adjustments. Just press W to get to the pane with the tools you need. The same shortcut works when you’re in Full Screen mode and using the heads-up display.
- F
- Enters and exits Full Screen mode.
- Z
- Zooms your selected photos to 100 percent in either the main Viewer or Full Screen mode. Pressing Z again turns zooming off, returning you to Fit-to-View mode.
- P
- Activates Quick Preview mode. In Quick Preview, Aperture loads previews only instead of full-resolution images, so you can browse through photos extremely fast. If you find an image you want to adjust, just press P again to leave Quick Preview mode and load the image.
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Showing Keywords on Images
Showing Keywords on Images
If you’ve added keywords to your images, it can be very handy to have Aperture display those keywords as labels on the bottom of each photo in the Viewer. This way, instead of having to open the Metadata Inspector, you can see at a glance which keywords have been applied to each image.
- Choose Preferences from the Aperture menu and click the Metadata icon at the top of the window.
- Click the Viewer checkbox (if it’s not already checked) and click the Set 2 radio button, which activates the “Viewer - Expanded” metadata view. In the Viewer, the metadata overlay appears below each photo.
- You can also change the setting of the Placement pop-up menu to control how this data is positioned at the bottom of each photo. Choose the placement you prefer.
- The “Viewer - Expanded” metadata set includes basic camera settings and file information as well as the photo caption and keywords. If you’d like to simplify the overlay so that only caption and keywords are shown, change the Set 2 pop-up menu to Caption & Keywords. Now you’ll see only captions and keywords as an overlay on each image in the Viewer — and you can hide and show the overlays at any time by pressing the Y key.
When it comes to these metadata overlays, you’re not limited to the specific combinations of metadata defined in the preset metadata views pop-up menu. You can use the Metadata Inspector to set up custom metadata views that show exactly the data you want. The setup instructions are on page 281 in the Aperture User Manual.
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Getting Info Using Image Tooltips
Getting Info Using Image Tooltips
Whenever you need to quickly get information about a photo in your Aperture library — the camera settings used, the file size, even the caption you’ve added to the photo — there’s a lightning-fast way to view the information, without having to open the Metadata Inspector or turn on metadata overlays. Use Image Tooltips.
- Use your mouse to point to any image in your library — either a thumbnail in the Browser or a full image in the Viewer.
- Press the T key to display Image Tooltips. This floating panel, anchored to your mouse pointer, gives you on-the-fly access to the basic information about the photo you’re pointing to, so you can see camera settings, keywords, ratings, and so on. If you point to another image, Image Tooltips will instantly update to reflect the data for the next image. There’s no need to actually select other photos; you can just move the mouse pointer over any number of thumbnails or images in the Viewer, and Image Tooltips will continually update with the data for each photo. When you’re done, press T again to hide Image Tooltips.
Image Tooltips can be used in more than just the Viewer and Browser. You can use this same technique on book pages when you’re creating custom books, on Web Page and Web Journal layouts, and on Light Tables. Wherever images appear in your various Aperture projects, just press T to get the data you need.
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Searching for Adjusted Photos
Searching for Adjusted Photos
Want to quickly and easily locate all the photos in a project that you’ve spent some time adjusting? Aperture makes it easy, by allowing you to search for photos based on the adjustments that have been applied.
- Open the project or album you want to search, so that its thumbnails appear in the Browser.
- Click the Query HUD button (the icon with the magnifying glass) next to the search field on the top right side of the Browser. This opens the Query HUD.
- Click the Add Filter (+) pop-up menu in the upper right corner of the Query HUD and choose Adjustments. This adds Adjustments as a search parameter in the HUD.
- Set the Adjustments search parameter pop-up menu to “are applied.”
- Close the Query HUD by clicking the close button in the upper left corner of the HUD.
Your photos are automatically filtered so that only the images you’ve adjusted appear in the project or album. To see all images again, click the small x in the Browser search field to clear the query.
You can use this same technique on your entire Aperture library to see all the photos you’ve adjusted in all projects at once. Just click All Photos near the top of the Projects pane, and then filter the images in the Browser using the Query HUD, following the steps shown here.
Image Editing
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Creating Black and White Photos
Creating Black & White Photos
If you want to create beautiful, richly toned black and white versions of your photos, you can use the Monochrome Mixer to get exactly the look you want.
- Select the photo you want to convert and make sure the Adjustments pane is visible. (If it isn’t, choose View > Inspector > Adjustments.)
- Click the + button near the top of the Adjustments panel and choose Monochrome Mixer from the pop-up menu. This adds the Monochrome Mixer adjustment control near the bottom of the Adjustments pane and applies the default monochrome filter to your image.
- Try using one of the filters from the Preset pop-up menu on the Monochrome Mixer to quickly refine the black and white conversion. You can apply the Monochrome with Red Filter, for example, to add deep contrast to blue skies.
- Fine-tune your results even further using the individual Red, Green, and Blue channel sliders to “mix” a custom black and white conversion that produces the effect you’re looking for.
If you don’t like the results, no problem. Just click the Monochrome Mixer checkbox to temporarily disable the effect, or choose Remove Selected from the Action menu at the top of the Adjustments pane to permanently remove the Monochrome Mixer filter.
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Setting the White Balance
Setting the White Balance
Aperture lets you remove unwanted color casts from photos with a single click using the White Balance adjustment. This simple adjustment can dramatically improve the look of photos that have been shot under lighting conditions that give them a strong blue or orange tint.
- Select the photo you want to fix and make sure the Adjustments pane is visible. (If it isn’t, choose View > Inspector > Adjustments.)
- On the White Balance adjustment brick, click on the eyedropper tool. Your cursor becomes an eyedropper and the Loupe appears, providing a magnified view of the part of the image directly under the cursor.
- Using the eyedropper, click a part of the photo that you know is supposed to be a neutral gray or white. This immediately adjusts the white balance, neutralizing the color cast.
- If you don’t like the results, just click the White Balance eyedropper again and use it to pick a different neutral area. If you’re not sure where to click, hold the mouse button down as you drag the eyedropper across the image; the white balance will update as you drag. When you see a color balance you like, release the mouse button.
You can also tweak the white balance by using the Temperature and Tint sliders on the White Balance adjustment brick.
Publishing
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Adding Borders to Photos in a Book
Adding Borders to Photos in a Book
When creating photo books in Aperture, you can design your own page layouts to make one-of-a-kind custom books. One way to introduce a personal touch to your designs is to add a custom border to any photo box.
- Open a book layout in an Aperture project. (To make a new book, select some photos in a project, click the New button in the toolbar, and choose Book from the pop-up menu.)
- Click the Edit Layout button in the book layout toolbar, just above the Pages pane. This allows you to change the actual layout of your book pages — moving, resizing, adding and deleting photo and text boxes on the pages.
- From the Action pop-up menu just below the Pages pane, choose Show Layout Options. The Size & Position and Photo Border controls appear just above the Pages pane.
- Select a photo box on one of the book pages. If it doesn’t have a photo in it, drag a photo thumbnail from the Browser into the photo box.
- With the photo box selected, use the arrow buttons on the Thickness control in the Photo Border pane to add a border to the box. Hold down the Option key when clicking the arrows to increase or decrease the border thickness in smaller increments. You can also just type in a specific thickness.
- Click the Color swatch in the Photo Border pane to bring up the standard Mac OS X color picker, where you can choose the color of the border.
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Printing Your Photos
Printing Your Photos
Aperture’s printing tools are simple to use, letting you create high-quality prints on your own printer.
- In the Browser, select the photos you want to print.
- Choose Print Image from the File menu to open the Aperture Print dialog.
- Choose a preset from the preset list on the left. Or just choose Sample Single Image Preset. (To print a contact sheet instead, choose Sample Contact Sheet Preset).
- In the Printer Selection area of the dialog, choose the printer you want to use from the Printer pop-up menu. Don’t see your printer listed? Then choose Add Printer from the same menu to see a list of available printers, and pick the one you want.
- After selecting a printer, be sure to properly configure the printer’s software. Click the Print Settings button to access your printer’s specific options and make sure they’re set the way you want. For example, to print borderless images, you may have to turn on a Borderless Printing option in the printer software.
- Choose a paper size from the Paper Size pop-up menu. The menu options change to match the printer. Be sure to select a paper size matching the options set in Print Settings.
- Under Layout Options, use the Scale To pop-up menu to tell Aperture how to size your image on the page. Fill Entire Page yields a full-page print, but may cause cropping if the photo has a different aspect ratio from the paper stock. Fit Entire Image scales the photo so nothing is cropped.
- Once your options are set, click Print to being printing.
- Save the settings you’ve changed as a Print Preset for future use. After you’re happy with the settings, click Save As and name the new preset. The next time you print, all your print options will be configured and ready to go.
For more advanced printing, use other options available in the Print dialogue to set a custom ColorSync profile or add sharpening to prints. You can find details one page 474 in the Aperture User Manual.



















