Photos App Tips & Lessons
-
Classes on Photos
Classes for Photos4 Lessons -
Lessons for Photos on the MacImporting Photos and Videos into Photos on the Mac7 Lessons
-
Viewing Photos and Videos in Photos on the Mac18 Lessons
-
Photos Interface
-
Viewing by Years, Months, Days, and All Photos
-
Thumbnail View Options
-
Favoriting Photos and Videos
-
Viewing Media Types as Albums
-
Viewing Photo Information
-
Viewing Photos in Full Screen Mode
-
Selecting Photos and Videos
-
Hide Photos and Videos in a Hidden Album
-
Sidebar and Split View
-
Search your Photos and Videos
-
View Photo Information and Metadata
-
View and Assign Locations to Photos and Videos
-
View Photos as Memories
-
Markup Photos
-
Viewing People in Photos in the People Album
-
Digitize Text from Images with Live Text
-
Copy or Translate Text in a Photo
-
Photos Interface
-
Organizing Photos and Videos in Photos on the Mac10 Lessons
-
Organizing Photos and Videos in Albums
-
Adding Keywords
-
Add Titles and Captions
-
Organizing by Faces
-
Organize Photos Automatically with Smart Albums
-
Creating Folders
-
Search with Filters
-
Delete Screenshots taken with the iPad and iPhone
-
Delete and Recover Recently Deleted Photos and Videos
-
Find and Merge Duplicates in Photos on the Mac
-
Organizing Photos and Videos in Albums
-
Editing Photos with Photos on the Mac13 Lessons
-
Basic Editing Tips
-
Adjust the Date and Time of Photos and Videos
-
Choosing RAW as Original File
-
Auto Enhance your Photos and Videos
-
Apply Filters to your Photos and Videos
-
Cropping and Straightening Photos
-
Adjusting the Look of Photos
-
Retouch your Photos to Remove Blemishes and Objects
-
Reducing and Removing Red-Eye
-
Make Selective Color Adjustments
-
Compare Edited Photos and Videos to the Original
-
Repair the Photos Library on the Mac
-
Lift Subjects and Create Composites with Photos and Pages on the iPad
-
Basic Editing Tips
-
Sharing Options in Photos on the Mac8 Lessons
-
Lessons for Photos on the iPadViewing Photos on the iPad16 Lessons
-
Viewing Moments, Collections, and Years
-
Viewing Photos on a Map
-
Viewing and Creating Albums
-
Selecting and Marking as Favorites
-
Viewing Bursts of Photos from an iPhone
-
Deleting and Hiding Photos and Videos
-
Searching Photos and Videos
-
Viewing Photos as Memories
-
Editing Memory Videos
-
New People Album
-
New Places Album
-
Search by Category and Details View
-
Easy Access to Photos with the Sidebar
-
Add Captions to Photos and Videos
-
Filter Photos from within Albums
-
Use Live Text to Copy or Translate Text in a Photo
-
Viewing Moments, Collections, and Years
-
Editing Photos with Photos on the iPad7 Lessons
-
Editing Videos in Photos on the iPad2 Lessons
-
Sharing Photos with Photos on the iPad3 Lessons
-
Syncing Options with Photos on the iPad4 Lessons
-
Lessons for Photos on the iPhoneViewing Photos in Photos on the iPhone17 Lessons
-
Viewing Moments, Collections, and Years
-
Viewing Photos on a Map
-
Viewing and Creating Albums
-
Selecting Photos and Videos and Marking as Favorites
-
Viewing Bursts of Photos
-
Deleting and Hiding Photos and Videos
-
Searching for Photos and Videos
-
Memories View
-
Edit Memories Video
-
Markup Photos
-
New Photos Albums
-
Search by Category and Show Details
-
Filter your Albums
-
Add Captions to Photos and Videos
-
Hide your Photos and Hide the Hidden Folder
-
Use Visual Look Up to Identify Plants, Pets, and More
-
Use Live Text to Copy Text in a Photo
-
Viewing Moments, Collections, and Years
-
Editing Photos in Photos on the iPhone8 Lessons
-
Enhancing Photos and Applying Filters
-
Cropping, Rotating, and Straightening Photos
-
Making Light Adjustments in Photos
-
Making Color Adjustments in Photos
-
Making B&W Adjustments in Photos
-
Reducing Red-Eye from Photos
-
New in iOS 13: New Tab Bar and Editing Tools
-
Are Your iPhone’s Photos a mess? Organize them with CleanMyPhone!
-
Enhancing Photos and Applying Filters
-
Editing Videos in Photos on the iPhone3 Lessons
-
Sharing Photos in Photos on the iPhone3 Lessons
-
Syncing Options with Photos on the iPhone4 Lessons
View and Assign Locations to Photos and Videos
Learn how to view and assign locations to photos and videos in the Photos app on the Mac.
Did you know you could view the location of where you photos and videos were taken in the Photos app on the Mac? In the sidebar of Photos, you’ll see Places. When selected, this album will show a map and you’ll be able to see where each photo and video were taken. If your photo doesn’t have the GPS metadata imbedded, you can also add it to the photo. See how to view and assign location data to your photos and videos in the Photos app on the Mac in this video.
Video Transcript (video also has closed captions):
Now let’s take a look at how we can view the location of our photos and videos in the Photos app on the Mac. Let’s go to my Mac.
So I’m in my Photos app here, and if we go to our sidebar on the left, you’re going to see we have Places. When I click on Places, it’s going to show me all of my photos placed on the map.
Now there’s going to be one catch to this. The photo does have to have GPS location embedded in it as metadata. Any photo that you take with your iPhone is going to have the location embedded in it. So if you’ve taken most of your photos with an iPhone, you’ll be able to view them on the map here.
So we can see that I have about 50 photos from Colorado. I have about 25 photos from Florida. Now, what I can do is click on this and then it’s going to show me all 25 of those photos. So here I can scroll up and down to view all of those photos to go back. I just click on the left arrow and it takes me back.
I can also zoom in and out of this map. So now I just go back down over here and let’s zoom in here. You’re going to see it’s going to start splitting them up. I have some from the Miami area. I have some from Cape Canaveral. And then I also have some from Disney.
Now I mentioned that the photo does have to have GPS location embedded in it as metadata. We can add that location metadata to photos that do not have it and we can also move the location of a photo. To do that, we go back over to our Library. We find the photo that does not have GPS location in it. I have this photo here. This is from Epcot. It does not have any GPS metadata in it. So I select it, and then what we do is we go up to the i. The i is where we can view all of the different metadata. When I click on this, we have a new window that opens up and we can see it was taken with my Panasonic camera. The Panasonic camera does not have a GPS chip in it. So it did not mark where the photo was taken. If we look, you’re going to see down at the bottom, we have Assign A Location. So now all I need to do is just click in here and I could easily just type in Epcot and the Photos app will search for that result. And now all I need to do is just click on this and I just assigned that photo to Epcot. So now, if I were to go back over to my places here, it would show up in my places.
Now I mentioned that we can also move this. Right now this has just assigned to Epcot in general, but actually this is in the land of Mexico. So I want to move this. Well, the first thing we need to do is zoom in here a little bit to get a more precise location. Mexico is right around here in Disney. So what I need to do is move that pin here over to that location. So now I just click and drag, it picks it up, and I place it where I want. So I’m going to go right about here. And we can see it still says Epcot, but now it has placed in a better location, closer to where the photo was actually taken. Once I made all my changes, all I need to do is close this.
Now, if you have moved the location of a photo and you want to revert it to the original location, like what I did here, all you have to do is just make sure that the photo is selected. And then you go up under Image. We go over to Location. And you select Revert to Original Location.
The last thing I want to mention as we can also hide the location. When we hide the location, it will hide the location from the Photos app. So it will not show up in the maps, but it will not remove that metadata from the photo. So that metadata, that GPS location, is still going to be in the photo itself or the video itself. It’s just not going to show in the photos app on the map. If you do hide it, you can also unhide it by selecting this.
So that’s how we can view the location of our photos in the Photos app. If the photo has the location, the GPS metadata embedded in it, any photo taken with an iPhone will, all you have to do is just go over to Places in the sidebar, and you’ll be able to see all of your photos mapped out in a map. If you zoom into a certain location, you also get better detailed where the photos were taken. Click on any one of the photos on the map, and you’ll be able to see all of the photos from that location to assign or change a location in a photo. All you have to do is just select the photo and then go up to the i to view all of the metadata. If it doesn’t have any location information, you can assign a location, just start typing in the location name. And if it does have a location, if you want to move it, you can click and hold on the pin to pick it up and then drop it where you want the new location to be.
So that’s how we can change and view the location of photos and videos and the Photos app on the Mac.