Giving photos a description

  • Thread starter Thread starter John Raf
  • Start date Start date
J

John Raf

Hi,

I know it is possible - I just don't know how
(preferabbly using WinXP built in options and not using a
3rd party app):
How can I give "descriptions" to my digital photos,
like "John's Birthday" or even more like writing who
attended (not using very long filenames of course).

And how would I be able to have those attributes later
displayed (can I use Windows Photo viewer?)

Thanks,
John
 
You can rename a file, just right click on it and click on Rename on the
opening menu and type in the name you want. Make sure you keep .jpg at the
end, otherwise the file will not open.
However this is tedious and when you change the name of the file you will
also change the listing and displaying order.
An easier way is to rename groups of files and at the same time making sure
they will open in the order you want.
You can use what is written below to do this with XP

If you need to batch rename and number, you can do this easily with XP.



Copy the photos to a new folder.

Open the new folder. Hold the Ctrl key down and press the letter A. This
will select (highlight in blue) all the files in the folder.

Right click on the first file (important to right click on the first file
because renaming will start from there).

Click on Rename on the opening menu.

Type in the name you want, to replace the current name. Any system will
work, such as year, month, event. For example type in:

2003_09_Virginia Beach Vacation (1).jpg

and press Enter.

XP will automatically rename all the files (1), (2), (3), etc. and they will
open in the order (1), (2), (3), etc.



Two important things when renaming using the above method.

1. Look at the name of the above file, you must include a space between the
last character of the file name and (1)

2. When you rename, don't forget to add .jpg after (1). If you forget, XP
will warn you, so enter .jpg after this warning. If you don't, you will not
be able to open the file. If you still do not enter .jpg after the warning,
don't worry. Rename again and enter .jpg



You can rename any time and as many times as you want. You are not dependent
on the camera wizard to rename.

You can rename portions of files in a folder, just select the group you want
and right click on the first one and rename from there.



You can do even better than this. Suppose you want a slide show and you want
the last three pictures taken to be the first three or in between some other
photos. Easy to do. Open the folder in thumbnail view, use your mouse to
place them in the order you want. Select all the photos and rename. The (1),
(2), (3), etc will be added in the order you placed the thumbnails.

Convenient if you want to make a slide show of pictures from different
folders. Just make a new folder, copy the photos you want in the new folder,
place the thumbnails in the order you want and rename.

You are not restricted to only one name and you can control the order in
which each group will open, by placing a number up front of the file name
for each group. You may have photos of Christmas, Easter, New Year etc. and
of different years. Once you have the thumbnails in the order you want,
select the first group, right click on the first thumbnail in the group and
rename:

1_2002 Easter (1).jpg

Then select the second group and rename

2_2002 Christmas (1).jpg

Placing 1_, 2_, etc in front will control the order of each group and (1)
controls the order within each group.

If you want to add another group later and you want these photos to be, say
between 1_ and 2_, use 1a_ in front of the file name.

You may also want to add some more photos in a particular group, say your
Christmas group. No problem. Copy the files in the folder, move the
thumbnails in the group you want to add them to. Select all the thumbnails
in the group, right click on the first one and rename. When you rename, you
must change the name in order for rename to take place. Add something like
XYZ after Christmas. Once renaming is done, select the same files again and
rename again. Remove the XYZ and you will be back to the original name.



Note: There is a disadvantage to changing the original name of files. This
is why I recommend at the start to make a new folder and copy your original
files in the new folder before renaming. The disadvantage is this. Many have
the option of video out from the camera to display the pictures from the
memory card to a TV for a slide show. If you change the file names and copy
the files back to your memory card to display on your TV (or even to just
look at them on the LCD of the camera) your camera will not be able to read
the files. You can always rename, using the same format (8 characters) that
your camera uses, but now you have to rename each file. So, be careful what
you do with your original files.



Note: Although I recommend making a new folder and copying your files there
before renaming, there is also another way to do this and you may prefer
this once you are comfortable with renaming. Here is how to do it.

Open the folder to see your files. Hold the Ctrl key down and press the
letter A to select (highlight in blue) all the files. Hold the Ctrl key down
and press the letter C. This makes a copy of all the files to your
clipboard. Hold the Ctrl key down and press the letter V. This copies
(pastes) all the files back in your folder. The file names will be the same,
but the words "Copy of" will be in front of the file names. You then rename
Copy of files.

This way your original files and renamed files are in the same folder.

This is also very useful when you want to edit a photo with software. You
always edit "Copy of", never edit your original file.



You can also use Irfanview to rename, available here for free:
http://www.irfanview.com/

Or many other if you search via google. They all have their quirks.
 
Thanks for the reply, but what I meant was I would like
to organize the photos withOUT renaming. Using file
attributes.

John
-----Original Message-----
You can rename a file, just right click on it and click on Rename on the
opening menu and type in the name you want. Make sure you keep .jpg at the
end, otherwise the file will not open.
However this is tedious and when you change the name of the file you will
also change the listing and displaying order.
An easier way is to rename groups of files and at the same time making sure
they will open in the order you want.
You can use what is written below to do this with XP

If you need to batch rename and number, you can do this easily with XP.



Copy the photos to a new folder.

Open the new folder. Hold the Ctrl key down and press the letter A. This
will select (highlight in blue) all the files in the folder.

Right click on the first file (important to right click on the first file
because renaming will start from there).

Click on Rename on the opening menu.

Type in the name you want, to replace the current name. Any system will
work, such as year, month, event. For example type in:

2003_09_Virginia Beach Vacation (1).jpg

and press Enter.

XP will automatically rename all the files (1), (2), (3), etc. and they will
open in the order (1), (2), (3), etc.



Two important things when renaming using the above method.

1. Look at the name of the above file, you must include a space between the
last character of the file name and (1)

2. When you rename, don't forget to add .jpg after (1). If you forget, XP
will warn you, so enter .jpg after this warning. If you don't, you will not
be able to open the file. If you still do not enter .jpg after the warning,
don't worry. Rename again and enter .jpg



You can rename any time and as many times as you want. You are not dependent
on the camera wizard to rename.

You can rename portions of files in a folder, just select the group you want
and right click on the first one and rename from there.



You can do even better than this. Suppose you want a slide show and you want
the last three pictures taken to be the first three or in between some other
photos. Easy to do. Open the folder in thumbnail view, use your mouse to
place them in the order you want. Select all the photos and rename. The (1),
(2), (3), etc will be added in the order you placed the thumbnails.

Convenient if you want to make a slide show of pictures from different
folders. Just make a new folder, copy the photos you want in the new folder,
place the thumbnails in the order you want and rename.

You are not restricted to only one name and you can control the order in
which each group will open, by placing a number up front of the file name
for each group. You may have photos of Christmas, Easter, New Year etc. and
of different years. Once you have the thumbnails in the order you want,
select the first group, right click on the first thumbnail in the group and
rename:

1_2002 Easter (1).jpg

Then select the second group and rename

2_2002 Christmas (1).jpg

Placing 1_, 2_, etc in front will control the order of each group and (1)
controls the order within each group.

If you want to add another group later and you want these photos to be, say
between 1_ and 2_, use 1a_ in front of the file name.

You may also want to add some more photos in a particular group, say your
Christmas group. No problem. Copy the files in the folder, move the
thumbnails in the group you want to add them to. Select all the thumbnails
in the group, right click on the first one and rename. When you rename, you
must change the name in order for rename to take place. Add something like
XYZ after Christmas. Once renaming is done, select the same files again and
rename again. Remove the XYZ and you will be back to the original name.



Note: There is a disadvantage to changing the original name of files. This
is why I recommend at the start to make a new folder and copy your original
files in the new folder before renaming. The
disadvantage is this. Many have
 
John Raf said:
Thanks for the reply, but what I meant was I would like
to organize the photos withOUT renaming. Using file
attributes.
===================================
If you right click a .jpg and choose Properties...
you can add your information to the summary.
(be sure to click...Apply / OK)

With your folder open... if you go to *View* and
choose "Details" you will see several columns
of info...size, type, date modified, etc.

Additional columns can be selected and added
by right clicking the bar just above the file names.

--

John Inzer
Picture It! MVP
return e-mail disabled

Picture It! Support Center
http://support.microsoft.com/?pr=pic
 
John, does this works for you?
When I do this and enter text in any category and then click Apply and OK.
Nothing sticks. I open the Summary tab after closing and any text I entered
is gone.
 
Yves Alarie said:
John, does this works for you?
When I do this and enter text in any category
and then click Apply and OK. Nothing sticks.
I open the Summary tab after closing and any
text I entered is gone.
===================================
Yes, it does. I don't know why yours is not working.

Just guessing...but if these are edited images, it
may be related to your editing software.

The following article is unrelated but it does
demonstrate that compatibility problems do
exist in WinXP.

(326774) Editing the File Property Summary
Values May Damage TIFF/EX Files
http://support.microsoft.com/?kbid=326774

--

John Inzer
Picture It! MVP
return e-mail disabled

Picture It! Support Center
http://support.microsoft.com/?pr=pic
 
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