Getting best quality iPhone photos to print
October 28, 2018 10:04 PM
I have an iPhone SE and would like to print photos from it. When I email photos from my phone, they come out quite large, but grainy. How should I be getting photos off the phone (or out of the cloud) if I want the best resolution to print?
"Large but grainy" sounds like an issue with the quality of the photos you're taking, not an issue with your iPhone's photo processing. How large are you printing these? When you print them at normal photo size or print them via a photo service like Shutterfly or whatever, how do they look?
posted by DarlingBri at 3:40 AM on October 29, 2018
posted by DarlingBri at 3:40 AM on October 29, 2018
What kind of computer are you using?
If you are using a Macintosh, the simplest thing would be to use Airdrop to transfer photos from your iPhone to your Macintosh. Computer and iPhone need to be logged into the same Apple ID. Select the photo, tap the "share" button (the little square with an upward-pointing arrow coming out of it). The share sheet should show an Airdrop option listing your Macintosh.
The Mac also comes with a built-in app called "Image Capture" that can be used to transfer full quality images and movies from your iPhone to your computer.
E-mail should also work. You might get different results if you initiate the process from your e-mail app (by saying attach a photo) or from the Photos app (by saying share this photo via e-mail). It shouldn't differ, but it might.
Or you can go the route of transferring your photos via some cloud storage service such as Drop Box, Google Photos, or iCloud.
On the other hand, it might just be that the photos aren't high enough quality to begin with, as DarlingBri suggested.
posted by Winnie the Proust at 7:16 AM on October 29, 2018
If you are using a Macintosh, the simplest thing would be to use Airdrop to transfer photos from your iPhone to your Macintosh. Computer and iPhone need to be logged into the same Apple ID. Select the photo, tap the "share" button (the little square with an upward-pointing arrow coming out of it). The share sheet should show an Airdrop option listing your Macintosh.
The Mac also comes with a built-in app called "Image Capture" that can be used to transfer full quality images and movies from your iPhone to your computer.
E-mail should also work. You might get different results if you initiate the process from your e-mail app (by saying attach a photo) or from the Photos app (by saying share this photo via e-mail). It shouldn't differ, but it might.
Or you can go the route of transferring your photos via some cloud storage service such as Drop Box, Google Photos, or iCloud.
On the other hand, it might just be that the photos aren't high enough quality to begin with, as DarlingBri suggested.
posted by Winnie the Proust at 7:16 AM on October 29, 2018
When I email photos from my phone, it asks if I want to send them as small, medium, large, or actual file sizes. Does your phone ask you this? Or maybe it defaults to one of the smaller file sizes?
posted by Weeping_angel at 5:21 PM on October 29, 2018
posted by Weeping_angel at 5:21 PM on October 29, 2018
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Be aware that it is possible to set your iPhone/iCloud ("optimise iPhone storage") so that full versions of your pictures are stored in the cloud and lower resolution ones are stored locally - and this is done automatically as a decision when memory on the phone starts to run short. For the above trick to work you need to have a phone which is storing the full resolution version of the picture on the phone.
posted by rongorongo at 1:36 AM on October 29, 2018