Thank you sooo much for this. I have tons of photos of my vinyl records i have to resize for my site recordsalbums.com. This is a AWESOME timesaver. God Bless You.
Picture Resizer 6.0November 6th 2011 - |
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An easy-to-use and free tool for batch resizing of JPG pictures and photos.
How to use it?
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The size of output pictures is controlled by the name of the application. To rename it, click on the icon to select it and do one of these things: press F2 key, click in the text under the icon, or right-click the icon and select Rename command in the menu.
Depending on your settings, you'll either see ".exe" on the end or not. If you see it, keep it there, if you do not see it, do not add it.
Renaming wizard | |
Resizing method: | Compression quality: |
Size: x | Custom quality (1-100): |
Rename to: PhotoResize400.exe |
For more advanced scenarios, you'll need to use the command line parameters. Learn about them on the .
Picture Resizer does not limit the number of images resized at once, but there are other factors that may impose a limit.
When files are dragged and dropped on the tool icon, Windows Explorer sends the names of the dropped files as command line parameters to Picture Resizer. Windows has a limit on the total length of command line. If the filenames(+paths) are longer than the limit, Explorer will not run the tool and display an error instead.
To work around this limitation, drag and drop entire folders instead of individual files or place your files closer to to the root of your hard drive (e.g. place them into C:\imgs instead of C:\Documents and Settings\YourUserName\My Documents\My Pictures\Vacation\).
A general purpose . |
An easy to use . |
A bugfix update 6.0.1 was released on February 13th 2012.
Version 2.0 introduces a new usage scenario. The tool supports intergration with Windows shell and allows you to define one or more commands that are added to Windows Explorer context menu (the menu that appears when you right-click on a file). Separate each switch by space, just like on command line.
To add a command to context menu, start the tool and type the name of the command to the "Command name" field and additional command line options (if you want to use them) to the "Additional options" field. Finally click the "Add to context menu" button.
To remove all created commands, click the "Remove all".
Version 2.0 allows you to add multiple commands to context menu of .jpg files.
PhotoResize was recently updated to be compatible with Vista Explorer - you can use it as a replacement for the missing Image Resizer PowerToy.
Open Windows Explorer and go to your "Send To" folder (usually C:\Documents and Settings\<your user name>\SendTo).
Place one or more configured copies of Picture Resizer there. Items placed in this folder will appear in Send To
context menu as demonstrated on the picture. Tip: you may change the tool's name to for example "Resize to 400.exe" instead of "PhotoResize400.exe". |
Version 6.0 from November 6th 2010:
Version 3.0 from April 14th 2008:
Learn more about images in article ''.
You are welcome to help PhotoResizer by:
Thank you sooo much for this. I have tons of photos of my vinyl records i have to resize for my site recordsalbums.com. This is a AWESOME timesaver. God Bless You.
Hy, it's a really great app. Just one thing. Can it MOVE picture from origin to destination? I mean delete the original pics. Something like DEL_ORIGIN?
Thanks
Not exactly, but it can overwrite the originals with the resized versions. You can then move them manually.
I need photo resize
Hi, when I use "skip smaller" attribute ("S" in file name), smaller pictures are not "copied" into the destination folder. Skipped pictures are ignored. is there a solution for this problem? I need all the pictures to be copied, skipped ones without change. Thank you.
You take Bitcoins!!! Awesome!
AWESOME you guys ROCK keep it up!
downright, excellent, /!\
Awesome application! Thanks!
I needed a quick solution and your software came in handy!!
thank you
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