PC Pro

Expert guide to Google Photos

With powerful tools for editing, sharing and organising images, Google Photos is far more than just a gallery app. Nik Rawlinson tries out its expert features

-

Think Google Photos is just a place to stick your blurred selfies? Think again. Nik Rawlinson explores its surprising­ly powerful tools.

Google Photos might look like a simple smartphone app – but there’s more to it than you might think. Its flexibilit­y, generous storage and ease of use make it a useful tool for photograph­ers of all abilities, from beginners to advanced hobbyists and even profession­als. Photos has evolved over the years. It started out as part of the defunct Google+ social network before being spun out into its own app in 2015, and has now developed a distinct personalit­y of its own.

It’s less closely integrated with Google Drive than it once was too. Although your photo library is directly accessible through Google ap ps and Gmail, you can’t actually get to it from the Drive interface. And your up grade options are different depending on whether you use G Suite or ha ve a personal Google account, as we’ll discuss below. Here’s our guide to Google Photos’ advanced features to help you maximise yo ur storage, share and collaborat­e on albums, store documents as well as photos, protect your private content an d touch up images so they look their best.

Take advantage of your free storage

If you’re serious about your photograph­y, you’ll want to share the fruits of your labour with others – not just friends and family, but

If you’re serious about your photograph­y, you’ll want to share the fruits of your labour with others

online communitie­s and even prospectiv­e purchasers who might want to buy the rights to your images. Traditiona­lly, you would do this by building a personal website, or signing up to a service such as 500px or Behance, but Google Photos gives all of those approaches a run for their money because it’s simple to use and extremely generous with storage.

In fact, if you’re happy to stick to resolution­s of 16 megapixels or smaller, you can store an unlimited number of photos. Google Photos refers to images of this size as “high quality” images. Larger pictures can be automatica­lly downsample­d, or you can choose to upload them as “original quality”, in which case they’ll count against your Google Drive allocation.

In all but the most extreme cases, the “high quality” resolution should be fine for both online and print use: at a 4:3 aspect ratio, a 16 megapixel image will have a resolution of 4,920 x 3,264. That gives you enough detail for an A3 print at approximat­ely 300dpi, which is considered the standard for profession­al print quality. Indeed, there’s an argument that the images you share online should be of a much lower resolution than this, so that anyone who wants to use them has to contact you and agree terms for obtaining the fullqualit­y version. Either way, capacity should be a non-issue.

If you do want to store all your images at a larger size, you’ll almost certainly need to pay for more storage space: Google gives you 15GB for free, but that’s shared with Gmail and Google Drive so it’s likely to get eaten up pretty quickly.

Luckily, a personal Google One account isn’t expensive, with prices starting at £1.59 a month to increase your allowance to 100GB – or £15.99 a year if you pay for 12 months up front. Beyond that, five additional tiers offer between 200GB and 30TB from £2.49 to £239.99 a month. G Suite users can’t upgrade to Google One, but they can increase their Drive storage allowance for the same price.

Share your images with the world

Once you’ve uploaded your shots, you’ll want to share them with friends and colleagues – or, if you’re a jobbing photograph­er, you may wish to show off to prospectiv­e clients.

You can do this easily by opening the Google Photos in a desktop web browser and clicking the tick in the upper left corner of each image you want to share (it appears when you move the mouse over the thumbnail). Once you’ve selected all the desired photos, click the sharing icon at the top of the screen – it looks like a “less than” symbol with dots at the ends of each arm. A window opens allowing you to send a link directly to your Google contacts that they can click on to view the selected images. You can also click “Create a link” at the bottom of the window to generate a link that you can distribute however you like. This is a very easy way to spread your photos far and wide, but remember that anyone with the link can access your work.

Albums generated in this way are unnamed by default, but you can give yours a memorable title. Just paste the link into your browser’s address bar to view the album, then click the three stacked dots at the top of the page and pick “Edit album” from the menu. You’ll see a space where you can type to give your album a name; once you’ve entered this, click the tick at the top of the screen to save your changes. You can also select a cover photo by picking “Set album cover” from the options menu.

Collaborat­e with shared albums

When you create an album of photos as described above, only you can add new images – and in most instances that’s probably how you’ll want it. However, it’s also possible to create a shared album and grant secure access to others so they can add their own photos alongside yours.

To find this feature, point your browser at photos.google.com/

sharing, click “+ Create” and pick “Shared album”. Give your new shared album a name, then select “Add photos” and click the tick in the upper-left corner of each image you want to include from your own

collection. Click “Done” when you’ve finished. You can also upload and include images that aren’t currently in your Google Photos library by clicking the “Select from computer” link at the top of the page and browsing to wherever they’re stored.

When you’re returned to the “Create album” page, you’ll be able to add email addresses for the people who you want to have access to the album – they’ll receive an email from

Google Photos containing a link. Alternativ­ely, as before, you can click “Create link” to generate a link that can be shared via other methods.

Creating a collaborat­ive album like this is a great way to collect together photos from an event, or to share the work involved in researchin­g a subject. Architectu­re offices can gather feedback from clients and staff who make field visits, designers can set up group mood boards, teachers can share resources spotted while out and about… the opportunit­ies are limited only by your imaginatio­n.

Digitise your assets

You might assume – if only from the name – that Google Photos was only good for storing images. But there’s no reason why you can’t use it to archive and share documents too. You can even tap the Google Lens icon (at the bottom of the main image view in the Google Photos mobile app) to convert the content of an uploaded image into fully searchable text.

The only potential problem is that your phone’s built-in camera probably isn’t designed for this task, and you may struggle to get a good shot of reflective materials or documents with uneven lighting. There’s no reason why you can’t use Google Photos to archive and share documents too

Google’s free PhotoScan app for Android and iOS – available from

pcpro.link/306scan – gets around this problem by intelligen­tly combining five images to produce a single glarefree result. To use it, simply hold your phone above the original document, so that all of the image, including its corners and edges, is within the frame, then tap to capture a photograph. PhotoScan will freeze it on the screen and prompt you to move your phone towards each corner in turn while the app automatica­lly takes additional shots. All of these photos are then analysed and combined to produce one composite image with glare and reflection­s removed – and with any extraneous background cropped away.

Limit what you share

As we’ve mentioned, when you create a shared album, anyone who has the link can access it. In fact, even people who don’t have the link could, in theory, guess the address – so you need to be wary of sharing anything personal or confidenti­al.

Luckily, there’s an alternativ­e, and that’s to share private material using Google Drive, rather than Google Photos. This gives you control over who can and can’t access it, limiting visibility to logged-in users.

To share images in Drive, point your browser at drive.google.com and click New, followed by Folder. Give the folder a name, open it and upload your photos, either by dragging them into the browser window or by

clicking New followed by “File upload” and selecting the images you want to share.

Next, select the folder you want to share by clicking on it once – don’t click twice to open it – and click the share icon that appears on the second-level toolbar, which looks like a person with a plus sign above one shoulder. Enter the addresses of the people you want to share the folder with, then click the pencil icon to select whether they should be able to view the folder’s contents or whether they should also be able to organise and change its contents (the latter of which is the default).

Quick and easy editing

Adobe Photoshop has little to fear from Google Photos, but the app can be handy for applying simple fixes. You can also use it to apply identical edits to multiple photos, which can be useful if you want to punch up the colours or adjust the exposure for a series of images.

To edit a photo in your web browser, open it and click the sliders icon at the top of the page. Initially, this presents a selection of one-click fixes and effects: if you want more control over light, colour and vibrancy, click the sliders button for a second time and use the graduated controls for each (use the “Pop” slider for the latter).

These controls may feel like a blunt instrument to start with, but clicking the down-pointing arrow to the right of “Light” and “Colour” subdivides each effect into more granular categories. For example, you can lift the shadows and dim the highlights in a particular­ly contrast-heavy image, or adjust the individual blacks and whites without ruining the overall tonal balance.

If you want to apply the same look to a set of images, that’s easily done. First, apply your desired adjustment­s to a single photo and store it as a Favo ur ite so that it’s easy to find (to do this, op en it and click the star that appears at the top of the page when you hover over it). Return to the root of your librar y and you’ll now see a new Favourites folder. Open this, open the photo you just set and press Ctrl+C: this will co py not the image but the applied ed its. You can now close the image, open another one in

its place and press Ctrl+ V to apply your edits to this new sh ot.

You’ll find the same ed itin g tools in the Photos mobile app for maki ng adjustment­s on the go. The only difference­s are that the “Pop” co nt rol has been relegated to a sub-category of “Light”, and the option to copy an d paste edits between photos is sadly not available.

 ??  ?? TOP Google Photos allows you to store unlimited images – as long as they’re not too big
ABOVE
Personal users can upgrade to Google One to get extra storage
TOP Google Photos allows you to store unlimited images – as long as they’re not too big ABOVE Personal users can upgrade to Google One to get extra storage
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? LEFT You can share albums from within Google Photos – but anyone with the link can view them
LEFT You can share albums from within Google Photos – but anyone with the link can view them
 ??  ?? LEFT If you want to capture physical docs or photos, the PhotoScan app helps remove glare
LEFT If you want to capture physical docs or photos, the PhotoScan app helps remove glare
 ??  ?? LEFT The copy and paste feature lets you quickly apply the same edits to several images
LEFT The copy and paste feature lets you quickly apply the same edits to several images
 ??  ?? LEFT For granular editing controls, expand the light and colour sliders
LEFT For granular editing controls, expand the light and colour sliders

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom