Working with Digital Cameras & Photos

Digital Photography Help    Deleting Duplicate Files    Finding Lost Files    Keyboard Shortcuts

Putting Music in Your Email    Using MSWord    Symbols: £ ¢ ® © Ñ ¾ ¿ ¥       Free Downloadable Music



Type in a word or phrase to search >>>
all of Don's computer help pages.
Search for a word or phrase on this page by pressing Ctrl+F and typing it into the Find box that will appear.


Don Edrington Name Logo
  • Don's Home Page
  • About Don
  • Recent PC Help Articles
  • 20th Century Flashbacks
    1. Camera Icon
      Digital Photo Basics
    2. Pictures from Camera into Computer
    3. Getting Acquainted with Irfanview
    4. Basic Terms: View Size vs Print Size, etc.
    5. Virtually Free Photography - Naming Pics, Albums
    6. When Digital Camera Photos Can't Be Found
    7. Digital Photography for Not So Digital Seniors
      Crop, Resize, Align, Colors
    1. How to Crop and/or Resize a Photo
    2. Problem Enlarging Digital Pictures
    3. Understanding CYMK & RGB Colors
    4. How to Straighten (Rotate, Align) a Photo
    5. Darkrooms Replaced by Computers
    6. Be Your Own Photo Processing Studio
      Text in Pictures
    1. Adding Text to a Photo
    2. Text & Picture In a Word Text Box
      Displaying Your Pictures
    1. Printing Multiple Photos on a Single Page
    2. Displaying Your Photos as a Slideshow
    3. Printing Photo Thumbnail Sheets
    4. When Multiple Photos Don't All Fit on a Print-Out
    5. Print Yourself or Have Pics Processed Elsewhere?
      Online Images - Emailing Pics
    1. Reducing a Digital Photo's File Size
    2. Red X Instead of a Picture
    3. Reducing the File Size of a Video
    4. Print Yourself or Have Pics Processed Elsewhere?
    5. Copying Images from a Web Site or an Email
      Pic Formats - File Extensions
    1. Digital Picture Formats (JPG, BMP, GIF, TIF, etc)
    2. Difference Between "Drawing" & "Painting" Programs
    3. Digital Cameras & Megapixelss
    4. Choosing File Associations for Picture Files
    5. Understanding "Animated GIFs"
    6. Comparison of JPG and GIF Photographs


    More PC Help & Other Free Programs
    Can Be Found Here.



    Contact Information on Don Can Be Found Here.
    Getting Photos from Your Camera onto Your Computer

    It seems that most of the questions I'm asked lately are in regard to storing, editing, and the sharing of digital photos. Well, there are dozens of ways of doing these things; but I'll just describe the easy methods I use.

    For starters, I ignore all the online promotions from Kodak and others who offer to help us do these things for a nominal fee. With WinXP, no special software is needed to get photos from your digital camera onto your hard drive. For pre-WinXP users, a CD always comes with a digital camera which make your PC and camera work together.

    Flash Memory Cards — USB Adapters

    Although some cameras connect directly to a PC for transferring photos, most use a tiny flash memory card, which you remove from the camera and connect to your PC via an adapter into a USB port. I have two cameras, each using a different shaped flash card, so I bought an adaptor that accepts four different sizes.

    When a photo-laden card is connected to your PC, the pictures normally begin showing up on your screen via an image-editing program, which then invites you to copy them onto your hard drive — usually into your "My Pictures" folder by simply dragging and dropping them.

    Well, I use seven different image-editors for various tasks, but prefer one particular program for opening, cropping, and resizing photos. Irfanview is completely free from www.www.irfanview.com.

    As you download Irfanview, click YES when asked if you want the program to be the default program for opening your bitmap images (JPG, BMP, TIF, etc.). Then, whenever a photo's filename or icon is double-clicked, it will open in Irfanview.

    Since digital photos tend to be fairly large, they may not fit completely in the Irfanview window. Click the toolbar "minus sign" to reduce the view size. Each click makes the view 10 percent smaller. However, makiniew size smaller does NOT make the actual printed picture any smaller.



    Resizing a Picture

    To make the photo physically smaller in size, click Image>Resize/Resample. Here you'll find many options, such as HALF, which makes the photo 1/4 its original size (half as high and half as wide). Or you can reduce it by a chosen percentage, say, 75% to make it 3/4 of the original. You can also designate an exact height or width in pixels or inches.

    Choose Your Preferred DPI

    This is also where you choose the DPI (dots per inch) for the image resolution. 300 DPI works well for images to be output on an inkjet printer. However, if the image will just be viewed on a screen, 96 DPI is fine for most LCD (liquid crystal display) monitors with 72 DPI being suitable for older CRT (cathode ray tube) monitors.

    Now you may want to "crop" the photo, i.e. select the important area, and eliminate the extraneous background which can quickly empty your expensive inkjet cartridges.

    With your left mouse-button held down, use the arrow pointer to draw a box around the area you want to keep. Release the mouse-button to fix the dashed outline in place. Finally, click the toolbar scissors followed by clicking the "clipboard paste" icon to complete the cropping.

    © - Donald Ray Edrington - All Rights Reserved

    Top of Page