Secrets of Apple’s Color Picker

July 23rd, 2009
Color Picker

Color Picker

It gives you five ways of viewing and choosing your colors, as you can see in the icons across the top.

The circle is the easiest to use. Click around the circle to choose the color you want. Raise and lower the slider on the right to make it lighter or darker.

You can match any color you see on your screen. Click on the Magnifying Glass to the left of the top color bar, then hold your cursor over the desired color (you don’t need to hold the mouse button down or drag). Click, and the color bar will take on your chosen hue. If you don’t like the exact shade that appeared, click on the magnifying glass again to choose another one.

You can also store your favorite colors for future use. At the bottom center of the Color Picker window is a tiny dot. Click on it and drag down. A grid will appear with hundreds of color blocks. Drag the color bar at the top of the window down over a square, and let go. The color will now be stored to use again in this document, or any other time in any other program!

Optimizing iPhoto

July 1st, 2009

Now that summer’s here and you’re taking a zillion pictures while you’re on vacation, here are a couple tips you can use to keep your iPhoto zinging.

Item Counts

If you’re on a G4 or other pre-Intel Mac, you may find the Library achingly slow.  The culprit may be the little numbers in the ovals on each folder telling you how many pictures are inside.

But while handy, constantly counting your pictures slows down the program, to the point that you may think it’s crashed.

If you find this slowdown while modifying your photos, Go into iPhoto Preferences. Under the General button, the second checkmark says “Show item counts.” It may take a moment for the checkbox to update, so be patient.

Depending on your computer, this tip may either make you feel like you tripled your RAM…or do nothing at all. But it’s worth a try.

Empty iPhoto Trash

Because digital photos don’t cost a penny, you’re probably in the habit of taking a bunch of shots to make sure you’ve got the perfect one. And when you download them to iPhoto, you should be ruthless to keep just one or two.  You don’t need 4 copies of every group shot!

But even when you delete your pictures, they’re not really gone. iPhoto has it’s own Trash, separate from the Trash on your Dock.

I just clicked on the Trash icon in my iPhoto the other day, and was shocked…I had 1,347 photos in it! Amazing, since I only have 2,774 photos in my Library. While I’ve trimmed my photos down by 33%, I never actually got rid of them. They’re still taking up all that disk space.

First, I backed up my computer using Time Machine (if you don’t have Time Machine, use your favorite backup strategy).

Next, I looked through to make sure there weren’t any that I really needed (nope, just my duplicates and the bad shots). Then, I went up to the iPhoto menu and chose “Empty iPhoto Trash.”  It took a few minutes, and when I was done I had an extra 1.5 GB of space on my hard drive!