Can anyone recommend an app/site (android) that can edit photos into the 1:1 ratio as required by Depop. Been doing my absolute head in trying to find one. Ideally looking for something with as little taps as possible and if it does it pics in bulk that's even better. I was using NoCrop before but it was still tedius then it randomly deleted 20 pics I had edited last night ???
I am working on a python script that will later be used as a tool in ArcGIS Pro that will take the photos from a drone, resize them by 50%, then run a geotag-to-point process. Right now, the script is set to copy all the photos into a new folder called "images_resized" as a way to indicate that these are the photos to be used and uploaded while the raw unchanged photos stay in the root folder. The issue I am running into is that when I run the resize part of the script, I end up losing the key location data I need for the script to run properly.
I know it's during the resize because I tried just the copy and the photos still had the info, but as soon as I run the resizer the data is gone. Any ideas on how to preserve the essential metadata or any workaround?
Actually, I don't want to resize as in making it larger or small in general, but I actually want to extend the canvas by pulling on one edge or another. I often use this to create new area to draw on or to add extra background around the image since it adds space based on what's at that edge. For example, I can take a logo that is cropped closely and give it a buffer around the edges.
2) The resize functionality is poorly designed and took me a while to figure out. It's poorly designed because the design conventions aren't consistent. Most of the left nav menu items have the little arrow for multiple options but crop/resize provides the options on the top of the window. why throw in a misc convention?
Then you can then use a freeware paint program such as eg: Paint . net or Pinta to resize and / or rescale the images. These are very easy to use and you can save in all the various popular image formats such as .jpg or .png etc.
I've been using paperclip to upload and auto-resize photos in my Rails app, and I love it. Only problem is about every other month my crazy manager decides he wants a new size to display the photos in. So I add a new style in my Photo model and all is good for new photos, but the pre-existing photos are now a problem. Now that I'm starting to have more than a few photos to deal with I need a programmatic way to resize existing photos. Perhaps there is some paperclip trick for such a thing? I'd really rather not have to figure out RMagick and write a script myself if I don't have to.
I've tried creating a macro for this, but I'm only able to write a macro that will resize a selected image to specific dimensions. And I can't get the macro recorder to recognize either manually resizing in the document window or using the Size dialog.
Without being able to resize an image then there is no way OO can ever be used as a final editor - one will always have to, as I do, spend hours cutting and pasting into a word processor to complete the job.
If Ignore the orientation of pictures is selected, the width and height of the specified size may be swapped to match the orientation (portrait/landscape) of the current image. In other words: If selected, the smallest number (in width/height) in the settings will be applied to the smallest dimension of the picture. Regardless if this is declared as width or height. The idea is that different photos with different orientations will still be the same size.
When a camera or cellphone says it takes 10 megapixels photos, it means that each photo has 10 million pixels (mega = million). And having 10 million pixels means it takes 30 million bytes (or 30 megabytes) to store that photo (which is a lot of space!). If you want to send this photo (or many photos) to a friend by e-mail, it will have to transfer 30 megabytes of data and it will take a while to upload it and a lot for the recipient to download it later.
Photos from modern cellphones and cameras usually have over 6 million pixels, while most cellphones, tablets, notebook or TV screens have only about 1.5 million pixels, which means you end up seeing a resized version of the image (you only use the full image if you print it). So if you resize your image, decreasing its width and height to a half, your image would have about the same number of pixels as the screens that will display it, and you wouldn't be losing any quality or detail, even looking at your image in full screen mode.
I know there are several ways to resize an image via the command line. Some of them are specified here. However, I was wondering whether there is a way to specify the size of the resized image, e.g. I want to resize an image that is 8.5 MB big to an image that is 2.5 MB. Preferably, the solution uses imagemagick.
Today I logged onto Constant Contact to see that I could no longer copy and edit my legacy emails. I had to re-create my template in the new editor, which posed many issues for me. First, I would like to be able to resize images using pixels as we were able to do in legacy emails. While I managed to get my desktop emails to look fine, I was dismayed to see that the mobile version looks completely jumbled with no way to edit that. I guess I am now going to have to re-save my images in mobile size before uploading, which is frustrating when I used to be able to do it right in Constant Contact.
Also, there are no tools for aligning images in the way I want. I want less white space in the center columns and I want to be able to align images without having to eyeball it. I would also like the option to center my links in the top nav, because they do not have the same amount of space between each and there is no option to resize them, or add more than 5 links as far as I can tell.
You want your images to load fast and display on the screen. All photos and images on the website should be optimized and no larger than 1024 pixels horizontally or vertically. One of the available tools we use to batch process image resizing for the web is PicSizer.
PicSizer only works with landscape or portrait resizing at one time. Please separate your photos accordingly and process landscape and portrait photos separately. If you have made it this far and still would like some help, you can contact your tech trainer.
I'm having an issue with an image. It's happened before and I kept uploading the photo and it eventually fixed itself but this time, I'm stuck. I added a column to this home page to show another class and changed an image and I can't get the second image to resize larger. I can make it smaller but when I click the arrow to expand it does nothing. I have tried everything I can think to do, like copying from the other column, etc. Any ideas? Thank you! It's those 4 flower pics on this home page.
I'm having, I think, the same issue. I have uploaded 4 images on the home page but one will NOT resize larger. I can make it smaller but when I click the arrow to expand it does nothing. I have tried everything I can think to do, like copying from the other column, etc. Any ideas? Thanks. It's those 4 flower pics on this home page.
You can only increase the size of an image so far with a column in a columns element. Once the width reaches a certain point it will stop so it doesn't change the width the column itself. One thing you could try doing is holding down the shift key, then clicking and dragging the vertical lines between columns. This will resize the columns, which also resizes the images in them. It will probably take a bit of fiddling with each, but you should be able to eventually get them all the size general size.
This is why understanding how to resize an image and keep quality can make all the difference. With proper resizing techniques, you can ensure your images retain their sharpness, clarity, and color accuracy, no matter what dimensions you need them to be.
You can choose an amount to resize the image by. The number, 60 would be the safest amount for files greater than 3 MB and under 10 MB. If your image is close to 3 MB, you do not need to resize it by that much.
NOTE: If you want to resize for multiple images, select all of the images you want to resize, then select Open With > Preview. Once you're in Preview, press Command + A to select all of the images. Then, go to Tools and follow the same steps as above.
NOTE: If you want to resize for multiple images, select all of the images you want to resize, then select Open With > iPhoto. Once you're in iPhoto, press Command + A to select all of the images. Then, go to File > Export and follow the same steps as above.
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