When you delete a shared album, it's automatically removed from all of your devices and the devices of your subscribers. If you turned on Public Website, the shared album is removed from the web, too. Deleting a shared album permanently deletes all of its photos. Before continuing, make sure that you save any photos that you want to keep.

To share an album with friends or family who don't use iCloud, open a shared album that you created, go to the People tab, and turn on Public Website. Your photos publish to a website that anyone can see in an up-to-date web browser.


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When you add new photos, the people that you share the album with are notified automatically. Make sure that Subscribers Can Post is turned on so that they can add photos and videos, too. Just tap the More button then choose Shared Album Details .

If you're the owner of a shared album, you can delete any photos, videos, or comments from anyone. Subscribers can delete anything that they personally added. Anything you delete is automatically deleted from the album on all your devices and the devices of subscribers.

When you delete a shared album, it's automatically removed from all of your devices and the devices of your subscribers. If Public Website was enabled, the shared album is removed from the web too. Deleting a shared ablum permanently deletes all of its photos. Before continuing, make sure that you save any photos that you want to keep.

You can also share albums with friends and family who don't use iCloud. Just open a shared album that you created, click the People button in the toolbar, and turn on Public Website. Your photos publish to a website that anyone can see in an up-to-date web browser.

When you add new photos, the people that you share the album with are notified automatically. Open the shared album, click the People button in the toolbar, and make sure that Subscribers Can Post is turned on so that they can add photos and videos too.

A shared album can hold up to 5000 photos and videos. If you reach your Shared Album limit, you need to delete some photos or videos before adding new ones. The photos and videos you share (and the comments or likes associated with those photos) stay in iCloud until you or the contributor delete them manually, or until you delete the shared album completely.

Ideally, when the link is clicked from my personal computer, the Photos app will open automatically on my iPhone/MacBook Pro. And if clicked from a public computer, it would require me to log into iCloud first before viewing the photos.

A while ago there was an update to iCloud that removed the posibility of selecting a range of photos from an album to download them to the computer. My question is: How do I do this now without having to click on EVERY SINGLE image in said album?? This particular album has 422 images in it and I want to download all of them to my Mac to manage them there instead.

I do not want to upload my entire stockpile of images from my Mac to iCloud. I started using iCloud and iCloud photos as a backup for my iPhone for when Im out traveling but if I cant download the album to my mac to later free up space on my phone I cant understand why I should use it. At the moment Im caught in a catch 22 where I dont have enough space on my phone to download all images I have on iCloud(if I turn it off) and I cant download them to the computer without having to cmd+click on each and every image in iCloud Photos to select them as I said above

If you do not want to use iCloud Photo Library on your Mac for your main Photos Library, you could create a second Photos Library on an external drive and use this library to download the photos from iCloud Photo Library to your Mac.

But making it impossible at all to batch download the items from iCloud is not user friendly. When the Photos.app at www.icloud.com first has been introduced, it would download all photos to a folder and not prompt to open them for each and every photo individually. This changed recently and made batch downloads unfeasible.

though after trying this Im not so sure it actually works that way, especially since it takes forever to upload the four images that I added this new photos album. The only way to solve this seems to be to clear enough memory on my phone so that I can download the entire icloud photos archive to it, turn off icloud photos and connect the phone to my mac and after that stop using icloud photos completely. Thank a million Apple ?

The source of the photos is my iPhone. No I will NOT sync my Macs library w icloud photos and thereby loose control over my library. I have no need for sharing between a lot of devises since I only have my Mac and my iPhone. I started using icloud photos as a means to get a backup for my phones photos but since I can not backup to the server for storage and free up space on my phone it has no use to me and this lack of control really annoys me so what I will do instead is this;

I think I found a way to do it. You would have to go to icloud and create the album with all the pics you want to download. Then go to your phone, find the album and you will see the option to "select all", select them and then use "Air Drop" to drop all the pictures at once to your Mac. It might take a while depending on how many pics are but I did it and it worked. Hope this helps.

Are there any limitations on using PhotoKit to add photos to Shared iCloud photo albums? While I can add new photos to AssetCollections that are regular albums, it does not work at all if the AssetCollection represents an iCloud sharing album. Do I also need to add a different type of PHAsset?

All of the items in my iCloud library (and my wife's library) are combined and backed up to Google Photos automatically. For better or worse, Google Photos is the "source of truth" that contains all of our archives and is sorted into albums. It's the backup I'd use to restore if iCloud ever goes belly-up. (And I have a redundant backup of Google Photos itself in case Google ever loses my data.) And the actual Photos.app library on my iMac is backed up to Backblaze for good measure, too. So the photos we take are covered.

Also, what about the 2,000+ previously shared photos? I thought I would be clever and just select-all on my Mac and drag them into my main library, but after doing a few quick tests I realized Photos.app isn't smart enough to not duplicate the photos I took and shared when importing. (This is likely due to Apple scaling-down and stripping out metadata of shared items.) And there's no way to sort by "other people" or build a smart album of "photos taken by other people" to filter out your own images when importing.

The first step was to locate the shared albums on disk. I searched my main Photos Library.photoslibrary bundle, but couldn't find them inside. A quick glance through ~/Application Support/ didn't turn up any obvious hiding places either. That's when I fired up DaisyDisk to search for large (10GB+) folders.

Each shared album is inside that folder and given a UUID-based folder name. And inside each album, every shared photo/video is itself inside its own UUID folder name. It's quite impenetrable and obviously not meant for users to poke around, but the programmer in me understands why it is this way.

At the top level is a Core Data database. I thought I might get clever and explore that to see if I could extract out the metadata of the shared items and use it to help me write a "smart" backup script (that perhaps imports other people's photos directly into Photos.app) instead of just taking the brute-force approach and backing up the entire album as a dumb blob, but I haven't had enough time yet to investigate.

You're able to browse your collection by date, album, video project, folder, or tags you have applied to your photos. You also have the option of turning on the facial grouping feature as another way of finding photos in your collection. Facial grouping finds similar faces across photos or videos and sorts those groupings into albums, allowing you to tag those albums with nicknames you choose. This feature can be turned on or off in the Photos app's settings page and in the People tab. Learn more about the facial grouping feature.

Switch on any settings that you want for this shared album. Subscribers Can Post means subscribers can add their own photos to your shared album. Notifications means you get notified when subscribers like, comment, or add photos to the album:

To bring your iCloud Photos into the Photos app, make sure your Photos app is updated and then install the iCloud for Windows app, all from the Microsoft Store. From there, sign in and choose to sync your photos, and all your iCloud Photos content will appear automatically in your Photos app.

When creating the Shared Library, the host can choose to add pictures or video later, or seed the new Shared Library with existing photos and videos (and preview what it looks like). Once added to the iCloud Photo Shared Library, these items are removed from the user's Personal Library (the default Photos Library), so this option does not create any duplicates.

You missed the most important reason to use the Shared Library: When using a shared album, photos are reduced to 2048 pixels on the long edge, except panoramic photos, which can be up to 5400 pixels wide. For reference, the back camera of an iPhone captures at 3024x4032. Digital SLRs just move up from there. As a result, every picture gets knocked down in resolution.

If you want to share photos as originals, don't use shared albums. 2351a5e196

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