You don't need anything special at all, you already have the tools you need to give it a go - frankly it's worth a pop in Preview.
I'll have a quick and dirty go in this answer and see how we go. I've taken 2 photos, one with my eyes open, and one with them shut. I will transfer the eyes from one to the other to create a composite picture of the two. Excuse the poor quality, but they are taken from my webcam in a dimly lit room:
Eyes Open:
Eyes Shut:
Opening the picture I want to copy from (just double clicking it should use Preview as the default app on most systems) ensure first that you have the correct edit tool bar showing, and select the elliptical select tool:
Now, draw a nice oval around one eye, starting in the top left and moving right and down. If you get it wrong, just single click anywhere outside the selection and start again. Repeat until you have got a good outline of the eye. You can fine tune by grabbing the handles on the selection tool and moving them a little:
Now simply copy this selection, open up the other picture, and paste it in, moving it to the required position (and potentially resizing a tiny bit if required). To remove the selection marks, click anywhere outside them to "set" the paste. If it's not in the right position, click undo, and paste again:
Repeat with the other eyes, and here is a finished composite:
Top tips:
- This works better with smaller snippets, obviously the more closeup it is, the more accurate your cropping has to be and the more obvious the effect is.
- Your photos need to be pretty similar in terms of lighting, zoom levels etc to get a consistent look.
- Zoom in if required to get more accurate selections.
- If it's a group shot as you say, then chances are everyone's face is quite small unlike my full face image example, and any imperfections are less likely to be spotted
- Keep your selections as small as possible, copying a couple of eyes is going to be easier and look better than trying to move a whole head, or person.
- Other software will provide for more complex features like smoothing the joins over to reduce any hard lines where the colouring is marginally different etc
- If you had to copy say a piece of eyebrow in order to get the whole eye, and it will not line up in the new picture, then use an intermediate empty picture file, paste it in, cut out the bit you don't want, re-copy it and carry on.
Kind of. The metadata is there and can be read by Photos on the iOS - I'm just not sure that there's a good way of automatically doing it and grouping them as you want.
But try this: launch Photos on your phone, hit the search magnifying glass, and start typing someone's name. It'll give you a menu list of all of the people, locations, albums, keywords etc that match your search.
My guess is that 'smart searches' will be coming soon, where you can then save that search and then later just pull it up as though it were an album. You can do the same in Photos on OS X but it doesn't sync that album over to iOS ... yet.
Best Answer
Ok, found it: in the Photos app... - go to "People" - Click on "Select" in the upper right corner of the screen - Then click on the "Merge" button in the lower right corner of the screen.