A PowerPoint photo album is a presentation that you can create to display your personal or business photographs. You can either download PowerPoint Photo Album Templates from Office.com, or you can create your own.

A PowerPoint photo album is a presentation that you can create to display your personal or business photographs. If you want to create your photo album from a pre-made template, you can search for one in the search box labeled Search for online templates and themes and choose whichever one you like.


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If you want to change the order in which the pictures are displayed, under Pictures in album, click the file name of the picture that you want to move, and then use the arrow buttons to move it up or down in the list.

To rotate, increase or decrease the brightness, or increase or decrease the contrast of a picture, in the Pictures in album list, click the picture that you want to rotate, and then do the following:

Ok Barbara, when you plug in ur ipad to ur computer if its windows go to my computer icon the find the ipad device which is recognized like a one more hard drive device, right click over the ipad icon and you will see the option to transfer all ur photo album to ur computer.

I want to transfer one album of approx 400 photos to my Mac's desktop.

Can't figure out any way of doing this.

Can't drag and drop. Can't copy and paste. 

The only options I'm given are to delete them, share them, or move them to another album.

I am about to try this solution but I would not have used dropbox for my photos if I h ad known there wan't an easy way to USE the photos. I make books of family photos by printing through a 3rd party and this makes the process even more laborious. If anyone has a real solution, please post.

Once you have created a photo Album you will see it's link at the Left side column. Click on the Album and at the top right hand side of the picture gallery go to 'Share Album' (in blue) and click on this and you will get a pop up. On the pop up go to the bottom right side to the tab 'Get Link'

Once you click this, that whole album will start downloading to your Mac/PC as a whole folder of your photo album which you can now move to a folder in your Mac/PC or Folder in your Dropbox in your Mac/PC.

Thank you Lamis K. That has worked for me to the point where I had the zip filed photos in my downloads folder, but I still saw no way to drag them in to my photos application. So I opened my Photos app, (I use a Mac) went to File, selected Import from the drag-down menu, selected Dropbox from the drop-down, and selected the file I wished to import from that list. Presto! it appeared in Photos as "last Import" and could be managed within that app accordingly.

Because unfortunately Richard such a feature does not exist. You cannot download albums without work around like Jennifer says. And to put them into another application is something you have to manually do

I am looking for a simple (and, of course, cheap) way to create a printed "photo album" on Windows 10 Home. I can get the "Photos" app to create an "album" (a bit flaky, but adequate), but there is no way to then print it than I can figure. (I want to print a bunch of pictures to show to an 80-year-old man and let him have to keep. Having an online "album" is not what I need.)

As someone has already answered about the Print option of Windows 10, that is pretty fine to do what you wanted. But there are some limitations, like you can keep only 1, 2, 4, 8, 12 or 60 photos in a page with that method. So, if you want to create a album page with custom/odd no. of photos, then it doesn't allow you to do so.

Also, with that method, when you create some layouts of photos in a page, you have to print them instantly, else you will not be able to save the state and you will have to start from beginning in later time. If you are OK with those limitations, then you can go through that method as that is the easiest and cheapest method.

But, there are many third party software which allow you to do more than that and there are many such software which are fully free of cost. You can find a bunch of them if you google it. Still I am suggesting you two of the cheapest (literally free of cost) and easiest software that you may try for your purpose. They have some advanced features like creating custom layout, photo editing and adding frames which may be useful.

There are endless "album" applications that are already optimized for standard photo and paper sizes. If your images are all a standard size and you're happy with the layout options those apps offer, they may be the best solution for you. In my own case, I've never bothered with those apps because I usually have cropped images that they don't handle well. I also often have a particular output or layout in mind, and find that I need to fight a simple app to get what I want, if it can do it at all.

It offers a huge range of image-related options, so it may look more complicated than a dedicated album app. However, you can easily navigate to the features you want. There are many options and things you can set or adjust, so again, the interface may look more complicated than an app where you just select your images, pick a couple of options, and output your album.

It has a built-in "Contact Sheet" option, that does what you describe. There is a good tutorial here, but I'll describe the procedure, and include an example of what I often encounter, and why I prefer this over album software. You can decide whether it is too much additional complexity for your own needs. I'll also suggest a couple of things that will improve the output appearance, even if you use an album app.

This is the part you can't do in a simple album app. The random images I picked for this post happened to be cropped in many different sizes and aspect ratios. Irfanview makes each image the maximum size that will fit in the predefined windows, so in this case, the sizes look mismatched.

If I was actually making an album and had this situation, I would group the images with ones of similar aspect ratio and generate the pages in batches so they look uniform. With normal photos, you would see this if you have a mix of portrait and landscape images, so I would group those by orientation.

You can save the sheets as images to see what they will look like before printing, or to reprint them later. For a photo album, pick a decent resolution setting, and set the printer for photo or high quality print with photo quality paper.

Editing the image will probably remove the rotation data depending on the software. This is a good option anyway as smartphone photos are way too big for the needs of a presentation. Probably, for full slide a size of 1360 x 768 is perfect, remember that the projector can only handle up to certain size anyway so your display computer will be scaling anything larger down.

Find a image editing program that can batch scale and save as copies to another location so you can add them into Impress easily.

9/9/22 | 30601 | XL

Tom McAfee, a 1994 Union graduate and president of Hallmark Systems Inc, spoke during Union's groundbreaking ceremony for a 40,000-square-foot academic building on the Great Lawn that will house the McAfee School of Business and the departments of computer science and engineering. - Suzanne Rhodes

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Union trustees, students, alumni and presidents help break ground on a 40,000-square-foot academic building on the Great Lawn that will house the McAfee School of Business and the departments of computer science and engineering. - Suzanne Rhodes

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Union students and faculty help break ground on a 40,000-square-foot academic building on the Great Lawn that will house the McAfee School of Business and the departments of computer science and engineering. - Suzanne Rhodes

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Jan Wilms, university professor of computer science and department chair, congratulates all of the winners of awards during the department picnic. - Kristi McMurry Woody

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Ryan Shaw, senior computer science major, introduces a web application he designed for Jackson Energy Authority in his Scholarship Symposium presentation. - David Parks

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Jan Wilms, professor of computer science and department chair, helps Sam Willis, senior computer science and engineering double major, with a project outside of class. - Kristi McMurry Woody

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Jan Wilms, professor of computer science and department chair, helps Sam Willis, senior computer science and engineering double major, with a project outside of class. - Kristi McMurry Woody

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Jan Wilms, chair of the computer science department, oversees a project that Mikias Seid, sophomore computer science major, has put together. - Kristi McMurry Woody

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Ben Townsend, receiving his bachelor of science in computer science, reads his program while waiting for the fall commencement services to begin. - Kristi McMurry Woody

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President Dockery fellowships with computer science graduates David Moses and Kendal Hershberger at the 2007 Happy Trails social. David and Lanese Dockery host the annual event at their home as a final chance for members of the senior class to fellowship as Union students. - Morris Abernathy 2351a5e196

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