Attaching Max Resolution Photos to Mail

How do I attach a full rez photo (from iPhoto) to an outgoing mail? Attaching a reduced size version is straightforward but I can't figure out how to attach the original...
Thanks
Nick (new to Mac!)

Ok part of this you may already know but for everyone else... here it is again.
Open mail and select New Message, in the top of the "new message" window you'll see the "Photo Browser" button, press it and then browse to the desired picture and drag into the "New Message" Window.
In the "New Message" window on the bottom right corner there is a "Image size" chooser, press the arrows to get the drop down and then select "Actual Size".
You can alternately drag straight from iPhoto or where ever and then select the size you what to send it as.
Hope this answered your question.

Similar Messages

  • Can't attach high resolution Photo to emil

    Whenever I attach a photo to Apple Mail, it takes the ~2.5 MB hi-resolution photo and "converts" it to a ~125k lo-resolution version. I have it email set on window's friendly and attach at end-of-email. If I log onto email at Yahoo.com or Gmail, I can attach the hi-resolution version and it works fine but not in Apple Mail. Any ideas.

    After you've attached the image, in the lower right corner of the window you have a choice of sending the file as 'original size'. Have you tried using that choice?

  • Why it is not possible to attache documents or photos to mail ??

    Why it is not possible to attache documents/photos/mp3s to mails?it is very much inconvenient!!!

    Why would you send an mp3 via email in the first place?
    The iPhone allows you to attach a single picture to an email. In addition to pictures that you take with your phone's camera, you can also send images that you have synced with iTunes or saved from your iPhone's Safari browser. When you attach a picture, the Mail application allows you to optimize your picture's file size before sending it.
    Step 1
    Tap "Photos" on the Home screen and tap "Camera Roll" under "Albums."
    Step 2
    Tap the photo that you want to attach to an email and tap the "Options" icon on the bottom left corner of the screen. Select "Email Photo" and enter the recipient's email address next to "To." Type any additional information in your email's body, if necessary.
    Step 3
    Tap "Send" and choose the file quality that you want to use for the picture.
    Researching something before purchasing is always a smart step to consumerism. If you dont see the feature, than compromise and use a 3rd party app. with millions of apps available I'm sure you can google it to find something to attach documents.

  • How to attach Windows-readable photos to Mail

    Friends,
    Running Lion with all updates.  Recently, when sending photos by email to Windows machines, the image is embedded in the messaage and not added as an attachment.  As a result, recipients are unable to download the photos.  Have I messed up a setting?  I attached the photos by using the photo attachment plug-in when sending a message.
    Thoughts?
    Thanks!
    Steve

    It's a bug in Outlook. This site has some workarounds: http://www.labnol.org/software/download-images-in-outlook-email/8277/
    You can try forcing your email message to send plain text and set the attachment option to put images at end of email.

  • How do I resize attached photos in Mail Ver. 7.0

    how do I resize attached photos in Mail Ver. 7.0 on iMac

    I don't think there's a setting in Mail to make this a default.  a ittle searching revealed an app that claims to do it.  Attachment Tamer is free to try before you buy to see if its worth it for you or if you just want to do it manually.
    http://lokiware.info/Attachment-Tamer
    hope this helps
    -mvimp

  • Why can't you easily attach photos from Mail?

    I'm kind of scratching my head that there is no option in Mail to attach photos or videos. I know that I can exit from Mail, go to Photos, select Copy, select photos, exit Photos, go back to Mail and paste them, but that's about 7 steps too many for my liking. Why isn't there an attachment feature right in the Mail app?

    Buca1uk wrote:
    Why don't you use the "Photo Browser" in the top right hand corner (when you create a new mail),
    Because we're talking about creating an email in the Mail app _on an iPhone_, not in the Mail app on a Mac. Scroll up to check the forum you're posting in...

  • Attaching photos in mail on ios7

    In the old ios6 when attaching photos to mail you had the choice to resize the photos, this is now not available in ios7, see how it worked in ios6
    http://www.macobserver.com/tmo/article/how-to-email-multiple-images-in-ios
    Can anyone help

    You are right, this option seems to be gone. I am pretty sure this is a bug, though, because the option is not even appearing when I am using cellular data and I can't imagine Apple wants us to sent 3MB images over cellular. You should sent feedback about this ( http://www.apple.com/feedback/iphone.html ).

  • Attaching photos to Mail then saving by Outlook users

    While I can attach and send photos, the problem is for the recipient if they are using Outlook. They see the picture and the file name as a JPEG, but they can't save it as a JPEG.
    How do you resolve that or can you?

    I use Mail to send photos, and the problems are with Microsoft receivers. At work we run Windows XP so I sent some photos to myself a couple of different ways. When I send it, I am attaching JPEG. When it arrives, I see the picture as if it were a text document and the file name is displayed below the picture with a JPEG extension. The problem is saving it - there is no JPEG option. HTML, Text and a few other options.
    That just seems odd to me. If I attach an Excel file, I receive an Excel file.

  • Macbookpro doesn't recognize max resolution of an external display

    hi
    i have a macbook pro 7.1
    i just bought an external display, LG IPS237L-BN 23 inch Full HD IPS LED Widescreen Monitor (250 cd/m2, 1920 x 1080, 5000000:1, D-sub, HDMI)
    my mac doesn't seem to recognize the resolution. after some internet research, it seems to be a common problem, except that all i've seen are some solutions via dvi port. My monitor has only 2 hdmi (from what i can tell, i'm no expert), and some "d-sub", whatever that is.
    I've had a small mdp adapter, connecting via hdmi-to-hdmi cable to the monitor, but to no success. I thought it may be the prob with the adapter as i've bought it a while back, so i went and got  a mdp-to-hdmi cable (this one: http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B00675Q2UY/ref=oh_details_o01_s00_i00?ie=UTF8 &psc=1), but again, the max resolution in display preferences is 1600x900, and all is blurred, while my main purpose is photo and video work.
    Any advice?

    Hi
    did you found the solution?
    I have MBP 7.1 too, and just bought an LG 22" FullHD monitor, but i got the same problem.
    I can set the resolution to 1920x1080 but the screnn on external display is not like fullHD, and its not as colorful as it can be(I tried the monitor with my windows laptop, and the colors and resolution was ok).
    I'm using Mini DisplayPort to VGA adapter to connect them.
    Help me if you can!
    Many thanks,
    nelsonhun

  • How can i send multiple videos and photos, via mail, at the same time?

    you allowed to send only one video or 10(+) photos via mail.
    but can you send both at the same time? so 10(+) photos and a video (or more than one) in one mail?
    because if my mom has birthday pictures or something like that. She likes to be able to send it directly from her iphone to every person she knows in just one mail.
    anyone any tips or tricks?

    Those restrictions are generally part of the email provider, not just the phone. Attachments are restricted due to size, bandwith use, etc. Trying to send that much information in an email attachment is even restricted on a computer. Sharing via photo sites is generally a better option for large amounts of pictures and large video files.

  • ICloud and Photos app are not showing full resolution photos

    Since migrating my iPhoto library to Photos, it has had problems showing the full resolution of photos. I initially had "Optimize Mac Storage" selected, but even when I had space available, it would not download the full resolution version of a photo. The loading circle in the bottom right corner would spin until it would be 'fully loaded' but the photo would not become the full resolution photo. I then checked "Download Originals to This Mac", but after it said it had downloaded the full sized versions of everything, the same problem occurred. I then went to iCloud and the iCloud Photos app and saw that some of my photos were displayed at about 1/3 the size on the screen. This wasn't just zoomed out. When I zoomed in closer the image did not resolve any better.
    HOWEVER, downloading the photo from iCloud and opening it in preview gave the full resolution photo. I have attached an image showing the different levels of resolution from os x Photos app, iCloud, and the downloaded image (shown in Preview). I used the zoom slider on Photos until it reached 100%, I set the view in Preview to "Actual Size", but in iCloud to get the same dimension image, I had to zoom to 200%+.
    Another thing that I noticed was that this doesn't happen to all of my photos:
    It definitely happens to all of my photos taken with a Fujifilm X-M1, where I shoot in RAW, adjust and process in Lightroom, then export JPEGs to iPhoto. These tend to be slightly smaller (largest side 2048 pixels).
    It doesn't happen to photos taken with 645Pro app (where I still export JPEGs to iPhoto with largest side 2048 pixels).
    It happens to some, but not all, photos taken with the iPhone's native camera app
    I am very confused. Also, even after having checked "Download Originals to this Mac" and letting it download everything, the Photo Library is only 3.77 GB. In iCloud it is ~10GB and my old iPhoto library was about ~15GB.

    I now discovered that I can't edit photos in the Photos app (presumably because Photos is not communicating well with iCloud and can't download the full resolution photo to edit).

  • Sending multiple photos in mail

    I read an old post that said it was not possible to send multiple photos in mail from the iPhone. Well, I have done it, but in a rather clunky fashion.
    I first made a new message to send, but left the To: address empty.
    I then went to the camera roll and selected one photo by holding my finger on it for a short time, long enough for the "Copy" option to pop up. I copied it.
    I returned to mail and pasted that photo into the message area.
    Returned to the camera roll and copied another photo
    Returned to the mail, entered 2 returns after the existing photo and pasted again.
    I then entered the recipients address. (For some reason the paste option would not appear if I entered the To: field first)
    This way you don't get the opportunity to make the photo sizes medium or small, but if the message is too large you are given the option of do that. It minimizes just enough of the photos to pass the size test, but it did work.
    This is clunky. Does anyone know of a better way to do it?
    Thanks, John Shanks

    You can select more than one photo at a time followed by selecting copy if you have aleady started composing a message and if not, you can select more than one at a time followed by selecting Share instead which will create a new email with each photo added as an attachment.

  • T510 w/ NVS 3100m can't show max resolution for a dell 30Inch

    T510 Docked
    Windows 7 64bit
    Dual-Link Cable attached to Dell 3007WFP monitor.
    Max Resolution is 1280x800
    Ironically, I have a second monitor attached on the DVI port 2 Single Link and this is 1600x1200
    NVIDIA NVS 3100m
    Why can't this display the max resolution for this monitor.
    I have the latest drivers

    sonniep5 wrote:
    I had same issue, tech support advised me to return T510 since it didn't ship what I ordered. In my case the resolution should be 1920x1080.
    you are talking about the FHD on the T510, this is slightly different to what the OP is asking. 
    Regards,
    Jin Li
    May this year, be the year of 'DO'!
    I am a volunteer, and not a paid staff of Lenovo or Microsoft

  • High resolution photos. How to?

    I need to e-mail high resolution photos. What is the best way to do this from an iMac, iPad, iPhone?
    thanks!

    If for business, uploading to an FTP site rather than e-mailing is the most efficient if teh recipient has one. My editor's email limits him to a small total size fo attachments that is almost always less than my copy and images, but the magazine has an ftp (file transfer protocol) site that is not picky about file size.
    You normally use a separate ftp client program on your computer. I use CyberDuck because the publisher recommended it, but I don't think current versions will run on the pre-2006 iMac this forum covers.
    If you MUST e-mail, you have to find out ahead of time whether your ISP or the recipient's have limits on file size.
    If you elaborate on which iMac variant you have and what Mac OS version you run, we may come up with more targeted recommendation. Right now we're all guessing.

  • How to attach a file to the mail

    How to attach a file to the mail

    I know that this can be done when going to any PDF program and push (send as  email)
    This also can done with multiple files or even with separate pages from that PDF file (Many programs can do that, like: PDF expert, Adobe Reader, iBooks, PDF Provider, Documents, etc)
    But what if I begin to wright an email, then I wanted to attach a file (such as PDF, or word, or any file) , FOR BASIC APPLE MAIL IT IS UNAVAILABLE
    You can attach Photo or Video but not PDF or other document
    There are some email programs that can attach files to email such as my.mail (as you can see from the photo)
    But why Apple don't provide such simple service ???

Maybe you are looking for