It's easy to get the trusty old Windows Photo Viewer back -- simply open up Settings and go to System > Default apps. Under "Photo viewer" you should see your current default photo viewer (probably the new Photos app). Click this to see a list of options for a new default photo viewer. Assuming you upgraded to Windows 10 from a previous version of Windows, you should see Windows Photo Viewer as an option.

If you upgrade a PC running Windows 7 or 8.1 to Windows 10, Windows Photo Viewer will be available, and you can set it as your default photo viewer if you want. However, if you perform a clean installation of Windows 10 --- or buy a PC with Windows 10 already on it --- you can't access Photo Viewer at all. The interesting thing is that Photo Viewer is still there. It's just hidden, and you'll have to make a couple of Registry edits to have it show up. After you do that, you can then set it as your default photo viewer.


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Windows Photo Viewer will now be the default image viewer for that type of image file. You'll need to repeat this process for each type of image file you want to use it with. In other words, whenever you open an image that opens in the Photos app, just close the Photos app and use the "Open with" menu to associate that file type with Windows Photo Viewer. You'll only have to do this the first time you open each new type of image file.

I have a photo that shows mostly black colors. I edited it in PS, assigned the sRGB profile and saved it as JPG. It looks great within Lr, PS and through any browser but I tried 10 different apps for Windows 10 and the black are so black that there is barely any detail visible. Is there a color-managed photo viewer for Windows 10?

I test for color managed viewers by opening a file in Photoshop and converting it to have a version in each of sRGB, Adobe RGB and ProPhoto. Save each image. If you use a viewer to cycle through the three images they should look identical in a color managed program. But look decidedly different in a non-color managed viewer. (This smokes out the non-color managed slideshow mode in Windows Photo Viewer.)

With that if you want a color managed photo viewer, you'll need to look third party like Adobe Photoshop, LR, Bridge, ACDsee or any other photo editing program with the capability of being color managed. These (color managed photo viewers) are not included in Windows 10.

And if you edited your files in Photoshop and want to view them in a color managed environment, why not use Adobe Bridge? It actually is a very powerful "photo viewer"; as well as photo manager, and editor.

Is there a photo viewer for Windows that shows you the exposure settings (shutter speed, aperture and ISO)? None of the Window's own photo viewers has that. I have more advanced, full-scale PP editor (Lightroom), but I don't want to run that clunky software just to check out my photos and the exposure settings.

You don't specify which version of Windows you are using - but, just in case you aren't aware, when you are in windows explorer you can view the "details pane" which will pull quite a lot of the EXIF information out of image files. This is an example in Windows 8.1, but it's been around in several previous versions (I can't remember exactly when it was first added). The image preview is not particularly large - but enough to recognise an image. I then have Picasa Photo Viewer fire up when I double click on the image - but you could have any viewer associated with image files take over at this point.

after some google search i bump into -> -classic-windows-photo-viewer-in-server-2016/ which works well except group policy is on computer level and might not work for everyone and most importantly hinders further customization.

Hello, 


After switching to a new laptop, (Dell XPS 15), using my same old monitor (Dell as well), I spotted some really bad colour differences between Photoshop and Windows 10 Photo Viewer


Some of the things that I've already tried & observed:

1. I did look a lot into colour management. I bought the Windows 10 Colour Managed version and exactly the same result.

2. I tried using Paint & Paint 3d for opening up the image & potential editing, same colour issue was present.

3. I did NOT change any of the settings that the photoshop comes with. I also tried to reinstall & delete the settings file of photoshop.

4. My exported versions are all in sRGB. I also tried swithing to other profiles and exporting as sRGB, without any effect.

5. The only way I managed to get it working is by changing the Proof Setup to Monitor RGB, but I don't have any idea why, after a short period of time(a few hours) this fix was not working anymore.


Tried the solutions from this post with no result. Proof setup was the only way and it now doesn't work again. 

 -jpeg-colors-different-from-windows10-photo-app/td...


I would be deeply appreciative if someone would help out!

Pictures: 


If you want to use the old Vista photo viewer in Opus, you can do that by setting it as the default image viewer, or adding overrides for specific types if you don't want it to be the default for everything.

Diverting you to the Vista app doesn't make sense in Opus, since Opus defaults to using its own image viewer (where next/prev works fine, however you launch it). If you're using the Windows 10 app in Opus, it's because you've explicitly asked for it, so we need to respect that choice, even if we disagree to it due to the Windows 10 app being garbage.

Long story short: I don't think we can make next/prev work in the Windows 10 Photos app. Microsoft could fix it by fixing their code. Or you could fix it by using a different/better image viewer (also the conclusion in the TC threads I linked, unless something's changed very recently but they still launch the Vista app by default for some reason).

I have trouble w/ TIF images that open up differently in FIJI/ImageJ and other image viewers like (windows photo viewer or even MATLAB). The image looks darker in FIJI/ImageJ, but the viewers show the correct image.

It's been a while since I've used it (and I don't have a Windows box handy to test on) but I remember using an image viewer called JPEGView. From memory, I seem to recall it supporting the feature you need most: refreshing the display when the source file changes. In any event it is one of the few open-source image viewers for Windows that I found to holds its own.

I know this is an old question but I did not want to install another image viewer. However, a web browser works just fine depending on what you need. You can open the image directly in it and then either

I have started testing out new Horizon 7.12 cluster. I have a Windows 10 v1909 image that we are using. I have followed a best practice guide for this Master image and used the VMWare Optimization Tool with the v1909 template. The image works great in the desktops pools except for one thing. One set of users will need to drop photos on their desktop temporarily to attach to a permits program. However I think the Optimization Tool has removed the default Windows programs for it. When you drop photos on the desktop they show the icon for Windows Photos, not the thumbnail, and when you click on them they won't open. I looked at a couple of troubleshooting tips for Windows 10 that say to look for "Always show icons, never thumbnails" in the View>Options settings, but it is missing. Have any of you run across this? Should I start over with a new image for this particular pool? I have tried installing other photo viewers, but I always get the same results.

OK - i know I'm maybe demanding so it is not even neccesary to opening files by viewer but i want to see thumbnails to have ensurance the folder with Affinity files is not empty when I'm browsing files with image viewer.

Thanks for reply. Yes, I'm using Explorer sometimes but generally I prefer Total Commander as a file manager and Faststone Image Viewer as photo/image browser. TC is able to show thumbnails but FIV is very, very convenient if I need to browse images (and does not show Affinity files at all).

for those using a Mac or Windows and with RAW photo files, I use FastRawViewer. It is especially helpful for analyzing images. By using the R key as a shortcut it will open your image in Photo's Develop Persona ( this is set in the preferences of FastRawViewer ). You can view JPG's as well. It is about $30 CAN

I found the windows 10 Photo app absolutely terrible for what I wanted, searched for ages to find a way to get it working. Winaero Tweaker is brilliant, sorted the problem and now I can use the photo viewer from windows 7 again, and so easily!! 17dc91bb1f

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