How Do I Upload Photos From My Mac to Dropbox?

mac-photos-app-screenshotMac Photos to Dropbox: a reader asks…

Hi Chris, I recently switched from Windows to a Mac. I'thousand having trouble working with photos. On the PC when I plugged in my camera, all my photos got put into My Pictures. When I do the same on the Mac, I don't see the photos in the Finder window under Pictures, I can only see them in the Photos app. And then here's my problem. I desire to put some photos into Dropbox to share with others, just I can't effigy out how to do that from the Photos app. When I try to drag an album of photos from the Photos app to my Dropbox, naught happens.

Apple of course, wants yous to use nothing but Apple products. And so they make it easy to utilise in an all-Apple tree globe, but if you lot want to mix things upwards with other company's products, your feel usually suffers. With the Photos app in Mac, importing Photos brings them into a database, as opposed to copying individual photo files into your Pictures folder. I find this an interesting manner to work, since the iTunes app on the Mac copies each private song into the iTunes Library in your Music folder. You'd have thought Photos would work the same way only no, when you bring photos in from a plugged in camera or via iCloud from an iPhone or iPad, the photos are subconscious in a database called the Photo Library.

Dropbox-with-OS-X-logosI will say that Dropbox seems to have…dropped the box…on dealing intelligently with photos across all platforms. They've discontinued their first-class Carousel app, and haven't provided hooks to the Mac'southward Photos app to synchronize photos betwixt the Photos app and Dropbox. Currently, there's no direct method built into Dropbox and Photos to allow you to copy or move collections of photos (aka, Albums or Moments). The only way to drag and drib from the Photos app to a Dropbox folder is with private photos – although you can select multiple photos to drag and drop. There are several ways to select multiple photos in the Photos app on the Mac:

  1. To select not-sequential photos, hold down your Command fundamental and click on each photo in turn that you want.
  2. To select sequential photos, click and hold in the white area above and to the left of the first epitome yous want, and then drag down and to the correct to brand a rectangle. Release the click and yous've selected all the images inside that rectangle.
  3. Some other way to select sequential photos is to agree down the Shift primal, click on the elevation-left-most paradigm you want, and then click on the bottom-correct-nearly image. Release the click and you'll have selected all the images betwixt the first and last, as well every bit those two.
  4. With the photos app selected as the active window, press Command and A at the same time to select all the photos.

mac-photos-app-iconIn one case yous've got photos selected in the Photos app window, you can drag them to the Dropbox folder window. Click on any of the selected images and hold the click downwardly, then drag the cursor over to the white infinite in the Dropbox folder window. Let go and they'll all copy as individual picture files. In the Dropbox folder, yous may want to create sub-folders for each batch of pictures y'all desire. Basically, you'll recreate whatever work you did to organize your photos within the Photos app (on iPhone, iPad or Mac) in your files system.

The simply way right now to recreate the diverse albums you've made in Photos is to brand a sub-folder in Dropbox for each of those album names file folder names, and so drag all the photos from each album into the corresponding Dropbox folder. This is kludgey, but the Photos App doesn't take Dropbox as a share location. I should warn y'all that this workaround means you lot'll be dealing with duplicate files, a gear up of images in Photos, and a set of image files in Dropbox.

mac-finder-pictures-photo-library-screenshotThere is some other way to get to the pictures in your Photos app without using the app, but your Finder window. Open a Finder window to your Pictures folder and y'all'll see the Photos Library icon. Right-click (2-finger click) on that, and so click on the carte item "Show Package Contents". Click on the Masters binder, and you'll run across a list of folders, one for each year. You can so navigate within these sub-folders to go to specific photos and copy them to the Dropbox folder. Just I warn you the Masters folder has tons of sub-folders, most of which hold only a few pictures.

Apple tree's Photos app has been created to make things easy for Apple customers who use iPhones, iPads and Macs, along with iCloud (and a larger than standard storage allowance). The Photos app lets you view and work with all your photos across all your Apple devices, and is quite easy to use. But trying to work outside of Apple products, services or apps tin be a very un-Apple-similar experience. Personally, I retrieve that's by design.


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