Jul 26
Open a person’s images in Faces. Right click on the image you want to be the key photo and choose “Make Key Photo” An easier method, drag your mouse over the key photo in the corkboard view and while the photos are changing, tap the space bar on the photo you would like to be the key photo, violá!

This tip originated on the referenced site: http://www.maclife.com
Jul 24
Be careful when moving faces around on the Corkboard. You can accidentally drop a person onto another person. It will erase your tags you’ve added to that person. A quick cmd-z will reverse the problem.

This tip originated on the referenced site: http://www.maclife.com
Jul 23
“Here, kitty, kitty!”
While not an official feature in iPhoto, we were able to get iPhoto to recognize the differences between two cats and train the app to recognize their faces.

This tip originated on the referenced site: http://www.maclife.com
Jul 21
Double left clicking zooms in to the map in iPhoto. Double right clicking zooms out. You can also use the slider in the lower right-hand corner.

This tip originated on the referenced site: http://www.maclife.com
Jul 20
Got photos you want to keep, but they might be NSFW, or you have photos are just cluttering up an event. Use the Hide feature to make those photos disappear without deleting them. Select a photo you want to hide and cick on the red X Hide button. You can show all your hidden photos, select View>Hidden Photos in the menu bar.

This tip originated on the referenced site: http://www.maclife.com
Jul 19
You can tag multiple people in a photo. Click on Faces and iPhoto will attempt to find all the faces. You can tag faces already found, then click on “add missing face” to create new face boxes. Adjust the size of the box, click done and add the name.

This tip originated on the referenced site: http://www.maclife.com
Jul 17
Find a group of images with a certain person. As you tag the images, iPhoto will learn their face and will eventually ask if if they are the person you’re looking for. No word if iPhoto will help you find the droids you are looking for.


This tip originated on the referenced site: http://www.maclife.com
Jul 16
If you store images on your iPhone, but want them to be imported into iPhoto, you can show only the photos that need to be imported by checking the “Hide photos already imported box.”

This tip originated on the referenced site: http://www.maclife.com
Jul 15
By default, iPhoto doesn’t upload photos with location information to online sites. To share your location with the world, open the iPhoto preferences, choose Web and click on “include location information for published photos.”

This tip originated on the referenced site: http://www.maclife.com
