Mail – The Graphic Mac http://www.thegraphicmac.com Mon, 27 Jun 2016 15:00:16 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.5.3 Where are VIP Contacts for Messages and FaceTime? http://www.thegraphicmac.com/where-are-vip-contacts-for-messages-and-facetime Sat, 13 Dec 2014 16:00:30 +0000 http://www.thegraphicmac.com/?p=10825 I'd love to see VIP moved from Mail's settings to Contacts proper, so that I can make sure the people who are literally "very important" get through more easily, no matter how they choose to communicate with me. And it'd be great if it happened with iOS 9. As soon as I saw the VIP feature of Mail, I wondered why I was setting it up in Mail instead of Contacts. It makes no sense. If someone is in my VIP list, they're a VIP in Mail, Messages, and FaceTime, not just Mail. ]]>

I’d love to see VIP moved from Mail’s settings to Contacts proper, so that I can make sure the people who are literally “very important” get through more easily, no matter how they choose to communicate with me. And it’d be great if it happened with iOS 9.

As soon as I saw the VIP feature of Mail, I wondered why I was setting it up in Mail instead of Contacts. It makes no sense. If someone is in my VIP list, they’re a VIP in Mail, Messages, and FaceTime, not just Mail.

Rene Ritchie goes into more detail at iMore.

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Easily rearrange the order of accounts in OS X’s Mail app http://www.thegraphicmac.com/easily-rearrange-the-order-of-accounts-in-os-xs-mail-app http://www.thegraphicmac.com/easily-rearrange-the-order-of-accounts-in-os-xs-mail-app#comments Wed, 29 Jan 2014 14:00:51 +0000 http://www.thegraphicmac.com/?p=9395 Related posts:
  1. Delay OS X Mail’s “Mark As Read” status
  2. Order your images when viewing with Quick Look
  3. Set up Outlook.com email with OS X Mail (or any standard POP3 mail client)
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Mac Mail address send order

If you have several different email accounts, you may find it annoying to have to choose the right email address as your “From” email from the drop-down menu (providing the default send account isn’t the one you want to use) in OS X’s Mail app. There is no cure for this problem, but you can at least put the list in the order you want it to appear in.

Mac Mail address send order fixI’ve seen other Mac sites that offer tips to accomplish this that range from the outrageous advice that you must delete all your email accounts and re-add them in the order you want them to appear, to the less dramatic but still cumbersome idea that you must uncheck the email checkbox in the Internet accounts preference pane and re-enable email in the desired order.

Thankfully, there’s a much more convenient way to accomplish the same desired result that doesn’t require you to delete anything.

Simply drag the individual email inbox icons for your accounts in the Mail sidebar to the order you want them to appear and restart Mail. Boom, you’re done. Now your drop-down menu will list your email addresses in the order you set them in.

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Enlarge OS X Mail and Finder sidebar icons http://www.thegraphicmac.com/enlarge-os-x-mail-and-finder-sidebar-icons Thu, 05 Jul 2012 15:30:55 +0000 http://www.thegraphicmac.com/?p=7787 Related posts:
  1. Hide those pesky Mac OS X System Preference icons
  2. Delay OS X Mail’s “Mark As Read” status
  3. Customize OSX’s Mail “Flag” icon
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Sidebar icon sizes

Large, medium and small icon options in OS X’s Mail sidebar

If you’re running OS X Lion on your Mac, you have the ability to enlarge the icons in the sidebar of Mail and the Finder. This is particularly useful for those with less than stellar eyesight, or who simply have large LCD screens and want an easier target to hit when dragging files to or otherwise clicking the icons.

Sidebar icon size preferencesChanging the sidebar icons in Mail is actually not an option if you adjust the size of the Finder’s sidebar icons. Oddly enough, both are controlled in the System Preferences under the General icon. Simply choose the size you wish from the drop-down menu next to the Sidebar Icon Size item and both Mail and the Finder’s sidebar icons will immediately adjust accordingly.

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Delay OS X Mail’s “Mark As Read” status http://www.thegraphicmac.com/delay-os-x-mails-mark-as-read-status Tue, 03 Apr 2012 15:00:10 +0000 http://www.thegraphicmac.com/?p=7379 Related posts:
  1. Delay the launch of your OS X apps, utilities and helpers at startup
  2. Disable extension install delay in Firefox
  3. Email client marketshare: Infographic
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One annoying function of OS X’s Mail app is that it automatically marks an email as Read the second it is selected. This is compounded by the fact that Mail automatically selects the top most email in the list (usually the newest email). Sometimes I just want to take a quick peek at an email without actually marking it as read. Thanks to this clever plugin, you can alter the delay Mail uses to mark an email as Read.

TruePreview is a simple plugin that allows you to adjust the delay time Mail uses to mark an email as Read. Once installed, you will find a new tab in Mail’s preferences where you can set the delay time to whatever you wish for all emails. Alternatively, you can turn of the “Mark as Read” status completely until you open an email in a separate window by double clicking the email, forwarding, or replying to an email.

TruePreview

TruePreview solves a huge annoyance in OS X Mail's behavior

If you prefer, TruePreview allows you to adjust the delay time on a per-account basis. This is particularly useful for those who have multiple email accounts with different providers.

I don’t use plugins for Mail anymore, but this is one plugin that I’m definitely going to keep around! A big thanks to OSXDaily.com for finding this awesome Mail plugin!

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Get rid of the new window animation in Lion Mail for a speed boost http://www.thegraphicmac.com/get-rid-of-the-new-window-animation-in-lion-mail-for-a-speed-boost Thu, 08 Mar 2012 15:00:21 +0000 http://www.thegraphicmac.com/?p=7255 Among many of the changes to the Mail application that Lion brought was an animation when you reply or create a new mail window. It's a nice touch, but on an older Mac such as my original Mac Pro, it becomes a slow, annoying, and frivolous feature. Here's how you can turn it off. ]]> OS X MailAmong many of the changes to the Mail application that Lion brought was an animation when you reply or create a new mail window. It’s a nice touch, but on an older Mac such as my original Mac Pro, it becomes a slow, annoying, and frivolous feature. Here’s how you can turn it off.

Fire up the Terminal and copy/paste the following text (and hit return):
defaults write com.apple.Mail DisableReplyAnimations -bool YES

This will turn off the animation when opening new windows in Mail. If you ever want it back, simply replace YES at the end with NO.

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Email client marketshare: Infographic http://www.thegraphicmac.com/email-client-marketshare-infographic Wed, 21 Sep 2011 21:00:59 +0000 http://www.thegraphicmac.com/?p=6070 Related posts:
  1. Infographic design: Netflix vs. Redbox
  2. Infographic: History of design tools
  3. Email archiving in PDF format for the Mac
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email client marketshare infographic

With 10% marketshare, the iPhone outpaces OS X's Mail for reading email

Litmus, a company that tracks email campaigns, has published a report that shows where people are viewing their email. Not surprisingly, Outlook leads the way with 37%. The interesting factor is that mobile email has jumped from 7% to 15%.

Litmus put together a great infographic to display the results of their tests. It’s important for designers and campaign managers to know how their clients are reading their email, because it directly affects the technical aspects of the email design.

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How to create customized OS X Mail stationery in Snow Leopard http://www.thegraphicmac.com/how-to-create-customized-os-x-mail-stationery-in-snow-leopard http://www.thegraphicmac.com/how-to-create-customized-os-x-mail-stationery-in-snow-leopard#comments Tue, 13 Jul 2010 13:00:03 +0000 http://www.thegraphicmac.com/?p=3285 Related posts:
  1. How to create customized OSX Mail stationery in Leopard
  2. Free Christmas Mail stationery pack
  3. View invisible files in Snow Leopard open/save dialog boxes
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Back in 2007, I wrote a tutorial on how to create your own customized OS X Mail stationery when Leopard was first released. To this day, it’s still one of the most popular articles on this site. I decided it was about time that I took a look at it again to make sure nothing had changed with all the updates to Leopard, and the release of Snow Leopard.

Mac OS X Mail Stationery

You can create your own customized Mail stationery quite easily

This tutorial is fairly simple, and you’re only limitations are your graphics skills. Of course, if you have knowledge of HTML, you can do a lot more with your customization. For the sake of this tutorial though, I’ll keep it simple.

What you’ll need

You’ll need just a few things to create your own custom Mail stationery. First, you’ll need a graphics editor; I suggest Adobe Photoshop, but Pixelmator or any other app that allows you to save specific size files as JPG and PNG will do. Next, you’ll need a text editor that can save files as plain text; Apple’s TextEdit will do, but you can use any one you wish.

Step 1

Navigate to the root level of your Macintosh hard drive and go to: Library/Application Support/Apple/Mail/Stationery/Apple/Contents/Resources.

Inside this folder, you’ll see five more folders named the way you see them in Mail when you click the Stationery button in the upper right corner of new emails. They are Birthday, Announcements, Photos, Stationery, and Sentiments.

Step 2

For the sake of keeping it easy in this tutorial, I chose to base my customized email off of one of Apple’s built-in templates called Sand Dollar Stationery.

Using Apple's own stationery as a starting point

Using Apple's own stationery as a starting point

Go ahead and open the Stationery/Contents/Resources folder. You will see 8 files and some folders (how many folders depends on how many languages you have installed on your system). Option-drag the Sand Dollar.mailstationery file to your desktop. We want to work on a copy of the file, not the original.

Step 3

Control+Click (right-click) on the Sand Dollar.mailstationery file on your desktop and select Show Package Contents.

Finding the stationery art files

Finding the stationery art files

Another Finder window will open. Go ahead an open the Content/Resources folders until you see the basic files for the Stationery template. Here you will see seven files and more language folders.

Step 4

Open the content.html file just to get an idea of the HTML structure of the final template file. You’ll notice that near the top of the HTML code, the Title tag of the stationery (Sand Dollar) appears. Change that to whatever you wish to name your file. You’ll want to use only characters and spaces (for whatever reason, when I used a hyphen or underscore it doesn’t work). Make sure you save the file as plain text, and with the .html extension.

Step 5

The Sand Dollar stationery is comprised of only a few graphics files:

  • bg_letter.jpg
  • bg_pattern.jpg
  • bottom.jpg
  • thumbnail.png
  • top.jpg

If you look at the Sand Dollar stationery template in the Mail application, you’ll have an idea of how it all comes together. Now you just need to decide on what you want your stationery design to look like. Once you’ve decided on your design, simply open each of the four .jpg files and customize them.

NOTE: The width of the body of the message background is important. You’ll want the borders (if you choose to have them) to line up on the top, letter background and bottom JPG files. (see screenshot below)

Customizing the stationery images

Customizing the stationery images

Obviously the file named top.jpg is the “masthead” of the template where you can place a logo, photo or whatever you wish. As you can see in the image above, I created a completely new top.jpg file to replace the Sand Dollar and paper background.

Keep the background simple unless you really know what you’re doing. The background of the stationery actually resides in two different files. The bg_pattern.jpg file is what Mail tiles in the background of your email to fill the width and height of the entire Mail window, but the bg_letter.jpg overlays that, so the background in that file needs to mesh well with the background pattern. Be sure to save the .jpg files as the exact same file names.

Step 6 (optional)

Open the content.html file (if it’s not still open) to make sure your images have updated in the HTML. If you haven’t physically moved any of the files or changed the names, the HTML document should be perfect. At this point, you can also customize the “template text” that appears when you select the stationery in Mail. Go ahead and add a signature at the bottom with your Web address or whatever you wish. For my purposes, I chose to just leave the text alone since I don’t send out emails with boilerplate text in them anyway. Save and close the content.html file, making sure to save the file as plain text with the .html extension.

Step 7

We need to create a stationery thumbnail image, so drag the content.html file to your Web browser and take a screenshot of just the stationery itself (Command + Shift + 4 then drag an area to capture the image. I then opened the original thumbnail.png file and pasted the screenshot into it and resized it to fit. Don’t forget to save the thumbnail image as a .png, not a .jpg file.

Step 8

We’re just about finished. Open the Description.plist file in TextEdit. Make sure TextEdit is set to save files as plain-text, not rich-text. About 12 lines down you’ll see a “string” with the name of the template, in this case it’s Sand Dollar.mailstationery. Change it to whatever you named your stationery file earlier in step 4, keeping the .mailstationery part. Save and close the file.

Naming your Mail stationery

Naming your Mail stationery

Now go into the English.lproj folder (or whatever language you happen to have your Mac display in) and open the DisplayName.strings file in TextEdit. Change the name at the end of the text again from Sand Dollar inside the quotes to the same name as in the previous step. Save and close the file. Again, make sure to save this as a plain text file.

Step 9

Now close the folders and go back to your Desktop and rename the package file Sand Dollar.mailstationery to whatever you wish, keeping the extension. In my case, it was Graphic Mac.mailstationery.

Step 10

Drag your new stationery package file from your desktop back into the original Stationery folder where you got it: Library/Application Support/Apple/Mail/Stationery/Apple/ Contents/Resources/Stationery/Contents/Resources/

Step 11

Close all the folders and launch Mail. Create a new email, then click the Stationery button in the upper right corner of the window to display the list of available templates. Under the Stationery item in the source list on the left, you should see your new template icon (provided you did create that thumbnail.png image. To make it easy, I dragged my new stationery template to the Favorites item at the top of the list. As you can see by the final product below, it works perfectly.

The final Mail stationery

The final Mail stationery

Obviously, the more you know about HTML, the more complicated you can make your customized Mail stationery templates. That’s all there is to it.

Further

The original Sand Dollar stationery template I based this tutorial on happens to have a 540 pixel wide text area, which I found out by looking at the HTML code.

You CAN USE IMAGES in this particular email template, just drag your image from the Desktop into the body of the email. Obviously you’ll want to keep your image at 540 pixels wide, otherwise it’s going to make a mess of your carefully crafted email.

You CAN NOT USE ATTACHMENTS when you use Mail stationery other than images, so don’t bother trying.

All email applications are not created equal. For example, Gmail should display the email perfectly, but it will append the background image as an attachment at the bottom of the email. I’m not sure why it does it, but there doesn’t appear to be a way around it. Outlook on Windows sometimes makes a complete mess of emails sent with Mail’s stationery. Again, I don’t know why or how to fix it. Keep your expectations low and you won’t be so disappointed.

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Archiving emails from OSX’s Mail application http://www.thegraphicmac.com/archiving-emails-osxs-mail-application http://www.thegraphicmac.com/archiving-emails-osxs-mail-application#comments Mon, 04 May 2009 13:53:11 +0000 http://www.thegraphicmac.com/wordpress/?p=777 OS X MailThere are lots of ways to archive old emails from OSX’s Mail application for later reading. Many of them require you to work with another piece of software, some require you to “restore” an .mbox file to the proper folder – and almost all of them require you to launch Mail in order to actually read the archived email. While most archiving apps offer plenty of flexibility, they can be more trouble than they’re worth if your needs are simple, and you don’t have the budget for 3rd party apps.… Read the rest

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OS X MailThere are lots of ways to archive old emails from OSX’s Mail application for later reading. Many of them require you to work with another piece of software, some require you to “restore” an .mbox file to the proper folder – and almost all of them require you to launch Mail in order to actually read the archived email. While most archiving apps offer plenty of flexibility, they can be more trouble than they’re worth if your needs are simple, and you don’t have the budget for 3rd party apps. If you’re looking for something a little easier with less bells and whistles, I’ve got a quick solution for you.

Here’s a really simple way to archive old emails:

  1. Select any and all emails you want to archive in the mail source column (hold down the Shift or Command key to select more than one email)
  2. Hit Command + C to copy them
  3. Open TextEdit from your Applications folder & create a new document – make sure it’s a Rich Text document if you wish to include any images in the original emails
  4. Hit Command + V to paste them into the document

What you’re left with is one giant text file with all your chosen emails contained in it, which you can save anywhere. Now here are some important notes about this method:

  • This text file is (obviously) searcheable
  • You can add notes to the file whenever, wherever and however you want
  • It’s a text file, you’ll never need to pay for another app to read them
  • There’s no installation of anything, and you can use any text-reading app to view the file
  • The text of your emails includes basic header information
  • Basic images & files are included

This method can be particularly useful if you wish to archive emails from a particular person. You can save emails for each person in their own text file, making it easier to find later.

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Free Christmas Mail stationery pack http://www.thegraphicmac.com/free-christmas-mail-stationery-pack Thu, 11 Dec 2008 12:26:30 +0000 http://www.thegraphicmac.com/wordpress/?p=1190 Related posts:
  1. How to create customized OSX Mail stationery in Leopard
  2. Free paper texture pack available for download
  3. Customize OSX’s Mail “Flag” icon
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iPresentee offers free Christmas Mail Stationery templates designed especially for the Christmas holiday to use with OSX’s Mail application. The Christmas Stationery package includes ten wonderful templates: Santa Claus Letter, New Year’s Day, Christmas Wreath, Merry Christmas, Gift, Snowman, Christmas Letter, Christmas Socks, Santa Claus and Christmas Tree. Christmas is on its way and there’s a good cheer everywhere. The Christmas Mail Stationery templates comes with an installer to make sure the templates end up in the right place and would be displayed in Apple Mail New Message Stationery menu automatically. Mail Stationery templates requires any Macintosh computer running Mac OS X 10.5 with bundled Mail application.

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Customize OSX’s Mail “Flag” icon http://www.thegraphicmac.com/customize-osxs-mail-flag-icon Fri, 25 Jul 2008 13:25:20 +0000 http://www.thegraphicmac.com/wordpress/?p=1582 UsingMac has a nifty tutorial on how to change the little “Flag” icon used in OSX’s Mail application. Using the built-in flag feature (Command + Shift + L) is a great way to bookmark/highlight an email, but for me the flag icon that ships with Mail doesn’t stand out enough. This simple tutorial not only shows you how to customize the icon, but makes the star icons you see in the image above available for download.… Read the rest

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UsingMac has a nifty tutorial on how to change the little “Flag” icon used in OSX’s Mail application. Using the built-in flag feature (Command + Shift + L) is a great way to bookmark/highlight an email, but for me the flag icon that ships with Mail doesn’t stand out enough. This simple tutorial not only shows you how to customize the icon, but makes the star icons you see in the image above available for download.

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