User Guide
Organizing your photos
Enjoying your photos
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Table of contents

Import

You can import photos from your hard drive or your camera. When you import your photos into F-Spot from your camera, it will always make a copy of them, leaving you free to clear your camera's memory. By default, F-Spot will make a copy of photos imported from your hard drive. Uncheck the "Copy" option on the import dialog or hold "Shift" when dragging photos into F-Spot if you do not wish to copy them from your hard drive.

By default, F-Spot copies your photos to the ~/Photos folder. You can change the folder F-Spot uses in Preferences dialog (Edit » Preferences).

If all the photos you are importing at one time are from a particular event, or have some other characteristic in common, you can create a tag for them so you can later find them with ease. To do this, follow the instructions below to create a new tag, then when you are importing them, check the button for "Attach Tag" and choose the tag you created.

Expert Tip: F-Spot uses a database stored at ~/.gnome2/f-spot/photos.db. Note, to access it, use the sqlite3 command. You can also manually specify path to a database by running F-Spot with -b option.

After an import, F-Spot will display the pictures of the latest import roll only. Read User_Guide/Enjoy#Search to learn how to deal with import rolls.

You can also import directly from Mozilla Firefox (http://www.mozilla.com/en-US/firefox/) and Thunderbird (http://www.mozilla.com/en-US/thunderbird/) using Firefox (https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/7091) and Thunderbird (https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/thunderbird/addon/7011) F-Spot importer extensions written by Pizzach (http://pizzach.ambitiouslemon.com/).

Edit

If you double click or press enter on an image, you enter Edit mode, where you can remove red-eye, crop, and adjust brightness and colors.

Versions

When you edit your photos, a new copy (called a version) is created, so your original is never altered. After your first edit to a photo, subsequent edits will modify the same version. If you want to create mulitple versions of your photo, perhaps with different cropping or coloring, you can do so via the File » Create new version menu option.

Crop

Cropping an image is a great way to improve the quality of a photograph by improving how it is framed. You crop a photo by selecting the part of the photo you want to keep. If you want your photo to be the exact dimensions necessary for a certain print size, you can constrain the kind of selection F-Spot will allow you to draw by choosing the appropriate size from the constraint drop down. See the Remove Red-Eye section above for details on making a selection on your photo.

Once you have made your crop selection, you must click the crop button beneath the image to finalize the crop. If you are working with the original photo, cropping creates a new version your photo.

Straighten

Straighten effect is a tool to level a photo, quite helpful for landscapes taken without a tripod, when (imaginary) line of horizon is not at 0°. This tool rotates an image by a specified angle and automagically crops the resulted image, so that you always see a perfect rectangle.

Adjust Colors

To adjust the brightness, contrast, and colors of a photo, first click the "Adjust the photo colors" icon to open the adjustment dialog. Change then some settings and save them with 'OK'.

AutoColor

This effect automatically adjusts color levels to make a pretty balanced picture color-wise. It serves best for pictures taken with automatical white balance, when camera didn't manage to do the job well.

Desaturate

To make a colorful photo a black and white one, open a photo of choice and press Desaturate button.

Sepia

To make a colorful photo look like an old-style picture in sepia tones, open a photo of choice and press Sepia button.

Remove Red-Eye

To remove redeye from a photo, you need to select a zone containing the eyes. You may want to zoom in on the image to accurately select the eyes in the photo. You should be able to correct both eyes on the same person in one shot, or even the eyes from multiple people at once. If this doesn't work for you, or the selected zone contains some vivid red parts (lips, ...) you'll probably have to correct one red eye at a time.

To make your selection, click one corner of the rectangle that will be your selection, and drag your mouse to the diagonal corner and release it. You can resize your selection by dragging its edges, and you can move it by clicking in the middle of it and dragging it to where you want it.

Once you have selected a zone, you can remove the red from it by clicking the red-eye button beneath the photo.

Expert Tip: you can change the threshold for redeyes detection by changing the gconf key /apps/f-spot/edit/redeye_threshold

Soft Focus

In photography sharpening one region of a picture, while blurring all the rest, is a way to make an emphasis and grab attention. It is achieved by using a lens that allows shooting with a short distance in front of and beyond the subject that appears to be in focus. Soft focus effect is a way to emulate such a lens.

Click to choose central point of the area you want to be in focus and adjust amount of blurring, then click OK.

Sharpen

Out-of-focus photographs and most digitized images often need a sharpness correction. The Unsharp Mask effect sharpens edges of the elements without increasing noise or blemish. To sharpen a photo choose Edit » Sharpen... and specify the following values:

  • Amount — strength of sharpening.
  • Radius — how many pixels on either side of an edge will be affected by sharpening. High resolution images allow higher radius.
  • Threshold — the minimum difference in pixel values that indicates an edge where sharpen must be applied. This helps avoiding creation of blemishes in face, sky or water surface.

Describe

You can also enter a description of the image by clicking on the text entry box below the image and typing.

Adjust Time

In both 'browse' or 'edit' modes, you can adjust the time of one or multiple pictures (Edit>Adjust Time). Adjusting the time of multiple pictures at once helps you shift all an import roll if, e.g. the time on your camera is badly set or if you forgot to change it according to DST.

Tag

A tag is a merely a label. F-Spot comes with default tags to get you started; you are free to change them and add new ones. For example, if you want to create a tag for a specific event, you can create a new tag named after that event under the Events tag.

There are many ways to tag photos:

  • drag and drop the photo(s) onto the tag
  • drag and drop the tag onto the photo(s)
  • via the photo's right-click menu
  • via the Tags and Edit menus
  • by typing them in (press "t" to pop up the tag entry bar, enter comma-separated tags) - with tab completion!

The first photo you associate with a tag will be used for that tag's icon. You can always edit a tag's name, parent tag, and icon by right clicking on it and choosing "Edit tag".

You can change a tag's parent by dragging and dropping it where you like. Also, you can edit the name of a tag by selecting it and pressing F2. Lastly, if you have the tag tree widget focused (e.g. you just clicked on a tag), you can start typing the name of a tag, and all the expanded tags in the list will be searched and you'll jump to any matching ones.

You can also change size of tag icons in the sidebar or even make tag icons invisible by selecting preferred option from View » Tag Icons menu.

Expert Tip: F-Spot can write tags as metadata fields into JPEG files. Tags for various RAW files, PNG, TIFF, and others are written to F-Spot's database. You will have to re-tag these files if you re-import your collection.

This page was last modified 08:07, 30 Apr 2008. This page has been accessed 50275 times.