How-tos

How to get the best image export from Photos in macOS


Apple likes to hide the fuss of technical choices in its software. That includes Photos, which provides a lot of sophisticated functions with a friendly veneer. However, when it comes to exporting images, you might not know which option to take because so many choices appear quite similar.

To follow along, select any image in Photos. Now, in the File > Export menu, you see two options: Export 1 Photo and Export Unmodified Original for 1 Photo.

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Photos offers several ways to control size and quality when exporting an image.

The second submenu item is easier to explain first. When you import media into Photos, it retains the original. Any changes you apply to it are stored as a series of modifications. In the library catalog and when you view an image, you see the modified version. Choose to export an unmodified original, and Photos copies exactly what was originally imported. It’s useful that the app retains the original, instead of only storing modified forms, in case you want to discard all your edits or export an image to edit again in another piece of software.

Most people routinely use the choice above it, however: Export X Photo(s). When you select that option, Photos offers an export dialog that has a lot of menus. (If you don’t see all the menus in the figure, click the downward-pointing arrow, and it will open to reveal more choices)

No matter what format the image was in when imported, you may select among PNG, JPEG, and TIFF in the Photo Kind menu. With PNG and TIFF exports, all the detail of the original is preserved, and there’s no option for lower quality.

With JPEG, however, you can pick an option in JPEG Quality that reduces file size by having less perfect fidelity to the original image. The lower quality you choose, the blurrier and more pixellated an image appears when you’re looking at an image at 100 percent.

Quality is distinct from resolution: Resolution describes how much information was captured in the image; it’s a description of the level of detail. Quality determines how crisp or authentic to the original the exported file appears. You can have an image with enough resolution to make a billboard from, but the quality could be so low that a lot of detail is lost. (Many image-editing packages provide an interactive export dialog that previews an image as you adjust settings for quality and resolution, including the estimated resulting file size in bytes.)

If you started with a lower-quality JPEG, exporting it as High or Maximum won’t magically make it more detailed—the original fidelity is lost. But if your original file is a Raw image (which captures raw sensor information from a camera) or was created as a high-quality JPEG, you should consider High or Maximum when exporting if you’re trying to produce a new image close to the original.





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