

Namexif supports the following image formats: JPG, GIF, BMP, PNG and HEIC. Click on the add files button at the top of the screen, and use the browse window to select the photos that you want to rename. The next screen that you see is Namexif's main interface. The window describes the application's functionality, and you just have to click on the Next button to continue. Every time you run it, you'll see a screen that resembles an installer's page. The program's interface is a little different if you compare it with other software. This freeware tool renames photos using their EXIF data, i.e. If you agree with that, then you may like Namexif.

Pictures from a birthday party, or a vacation, etc. You can delete and add options as required, keep changing them until the preview shows what you want, and select ‘Rename’.It might be easier if the images had dates as the name, right, e.g. The first time you see this screen it’s not very intuitive. Now MAKE SURE you have your modified images selected, and select Tools > Batch Rename.Ĥ. This time I want my images 550 px wide ( Note: For a thumbnail that’s pretty big! But that’s what I use on this site). Now I want to create my ‘Thumbnails”, as before open the Image Processor.Ģ. To start press ‘Run’.īatch Resize and Rename Images in Photoshopġ. set the width to your required size, (the height will resize on an image-per-image basis).

Select a folder to save the altered images to ( Note: Even if you select the same location it creates a folder in that location and puts the changed images in that new folder – don’t panic). Browse to the location/folder containing your images and select them > Tools > Image Processor.ģ. Open Photoshop and select File > Browse in Bridge.Ģ. In Photoshop ,you can record an ‘action” of you resizing an image then ‘Batch process’ that action on a lot of images, but I find that ‘clunky’ and sometimes it simply will not do what I want it to do! So I use Adobe Bridge instead. So If I can batch resize and batch rename these files I will save myself a LOT of time. The smaller of the two images you see on the site nearly always has the same name, but has an ‘s’ on the end.

This means I spend a long time in Photoshop messing about with image sizes. In addition I scale the larger screenshots down to 900 pixels for the images I Hyperlink to. I have to do this quite a lot, I take a lot of screen-shots for the site, and have to resize them down, (usually to 550 pixels) so that, they fit with the layout.
