"What a great company and product! It's easy to upload your picture, and the end result will make you smile. The picture has heft and is real art. I will definitely be using Frameology again, for gifts and my own photography."
"Frameology is by far superior to other online photo-framing companies. The ease of uploading your prints, and then being able to edit the print makes this process flawless. My framed prints arrived flawlessly created. I am very impressed."
Using photo and picture frames is a great way to infuse your personal life into your decor. Frames offer a great way to make the people and places you love a natural part of every room in your home, as well as celebrate friends, family, cherished memories and past adventures. Either way, the right picture frame will help highlight, contrast or tie your photos in with the rest of your interior design.
Make sure to choose the color and style of the photo frame based on where you want to use it. A tip is to use contrasting colors to accentuate and bring attention to your picture. For example, a black picture frame goes very well on a bright wall, while a white or silver frame does a good job of making your picture pop on a darker surface.
A picture mount is particularly striking when framing small prints in large picture frames. And this makes it easier for you to find a frame that fits, since you can frame smaller pictures in larger frames.
Hi all, are there any digital photo frames that connect with a Nextcloud instance? I want to get one of these for my parents to see photos of our family but don't exactly trust them enough to share all photos without them ending up on social media...
This option will allow you to order 2 or more frames and send them to different locations at the same time through the same checkout experience without having to enter different shipping addresses one by one.
I have a s22 ultra and take lots of wildlife pix. Often, the frame I like is not the last frame shown. I can view motion photo and select that frame, but when I go to edit or remaster, it always reverts to the final frame instead. How do I reset the picture to show the frame I really want?
When I view the motion photo, I see the editing signs at the bottom as you have described, but there is no icon for a stack of Polaroid pictures, nor an icon for a Crown. What I do get is an expanded picture of the motion photo , and it lets me slide that expanded picture back-and-forth to see individual frames. And in the place where you said there will be a stack of Polaroid pictures, I get what looks like a play button surrounded by 4 corner boundaries. If I tap that icon, it saves that image as a separate file. However it follows the original rather than precede it.
I am concerned that doing this may lose some of the detail that the original motion photo has. The JPEG that is saved this way seems to have a smaller file size than a remastering of the original motion photo would have produced. Ideally, The process you have described would allow me to select an individual frame and then remaster the photo based on that frame, but it doesn't seem to let me do that. But this sorta works; thanks!
For as good as the s22 Ultra camera is, this is a disappointing lapse in the editing software, The single frame capture seems to have a relatively low resolution. I've begun experimenting with Google Photos as the picture editor, and early results suggests it is both easier to extract a single frame and also at a higher resolution. I'll report back when I'm more confident of the results.
You can select timing and duration for how long photos stay on screen in the app. We selected five minutes as a happy medium, but you can zip them by every 15 seconds, if you like, or drool over them forever at 24 hours.
So, I belted out a quick frame holder. Sadly I forgot to record what I was doing, I did learn quite a bit along the way. If I have time at a future day I will see about redoing the design and including a tutorial for it.
The base I made in acrylic is already taking up a significant amount of table space for a single photo. But I had to go larger for stability. It is only about 2/3 the size of the full frame. And doing the credit card size thing on a frame would mean the base is larger than the frame itself.
I was referring to the idea - not necessarily the size (an for any size frame). That is using the idea to make the stand built into the frame (like many frames have now). I understand about your acrylic base - which the idea is also good for displaying plaques or plates, etc. ! Happy Fall everyone!
I use an app on my TV, firestick, and Android TV called Kodi. It can connect to Windows shares and access photo directories. With Samba on Linux, (NFS too, ) you can share out the pictures folder. Kodi Its like a multimedia center viewer program and you can link it to windows and show videos and pictures on your TV among other things that it can do but this is what you are looking for and it can do that. Kodi Can also link to a Google drive and show photos that way.
If you have your photos or movies on your laptop, and the Firestick travels with you too, Kodi will be able to access every photo that you have in your shared folder on your laptop So long as they are both on the same wifi network. If you create a share on your laptop called pictures and on the fire stick you configure Kodi to look for your picture folder on your laptop. Kodi can browse the local wifi network and find your PC and folder automatically. I have Kodi running on my living room and bedroom TV (Firestick 4K). they can access my shared music videos and pictures from both rooms.
Now I got a new cellphone (Xiaomi Mi A1) over a year ago, with a fabulous camera function, but unfortunately all the photos take on that camera are displaying rotated 90 degrees on the photo frame. The old portrait photos still show up fine, and my portrait photos from the new camera display fine on my computer, Google Photos, etc. But when I load them into the photo frame, they are rotated 90 degrees.
JPG files have a "metadata" section embedded into the photographs, known as EXIF data. Most likely the photo is always being stored the same way with EXIF data defining the orientation. The photo frame is likely not correctly reading the EXIF data and reorienting the photos.
You can likely fix this problem by using a graphics program to rotate the photos 90 degrees and then save them. This will result in a slight degradation of quality, but for day-to-day use, nothing to noticeable (but save the originals if they are valuable). Unfortunately all photos you want to re-orientate will need to be edited. Without knowing the OS you are using its not possible to advise the software to use to re-orientate the photos. I'm sure GIMP will do it, and I am sure there are plenty other programs as well.
I happen to have a Xiaomi A1 as well. I love my phone, but the camera function is actually not particularly impressive, and neither is the software- although the 2x optical zoom and interface is a nice touch and it is very easy to use. I replaced Android One with LineageOS, and part of this required replacing the camera software. I note that my new camera is A LOT more powerful (but I miss how easy optical zoom was on the original app). I have just taken some photos with my current app, and it saves the files "correctly" oriented rather then using EXIF information. This means you can likely find an alternative camera app which will save new files in such a way that the photo frame will just handle them, but without some hacking you may loose the functionality of your 2x optical zoom. (Google Camera can do it, but may require some hacking)
In Publisher, is there a possibility to create and place multiple photo frames (or frames) in rows and columns at once, including doing spacing between them?
In InDesign that is possible and one of my favorite (and probabyl most used) feature, I really like to have (or see) in Publisher.
Thanks for the help!!
Ok thanks, that would be a way yes, somekind of workaround.
But the tool/function from InDesign is somewhat more comfortable, though not essential for working, but it makes it easier.
In ID you can press the arrow keys to add (or substracts) more frames in a row or a column, after you are just pulled up the first frame (without yet placing it).
Then you can adjust the spacing between them all (by holding space key I think)
I wonder if APub can do this too and I just miss the function, or if its not in APub yet (which would bring me to place a feature request )
As I said its not essential to me, but I would like to have that feature.
Its somewhat difficult to explain what I mean so I linked this video, which shows the function
Since it is difficult to get complete coverage of the frame with round pieces, we painted over the dark green parts of the frame with a neutral colour, in case parts of the frame ended up peeking through. We had mixed together some acrylic paints we had at home. We were aiming for something close to the shade of the wood rounds but of course, ran out of white paint just as we were getting started!
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