Iphone wallpaper where is it stored




















When you back up your iPhone from iTunes, the device saves your wallpaper and other images in the backup files. Depending on your settings, these images are stored either on your computer via iTunes or on iCloud via Wi-Fi syncing. Backed-up files are compressed and, in some cases, encrypted, so although your wallpaper images are saved, they are not accessible as individual, readable image files.

This information refers to Apple iOS 6. Information and instructions may vary depending on your particular device and operating system. Rebecca Mecomber, a former radio broadcaster, has been a professional blogger and writer since Home Phone. On the iPhone The default wallpaper images that come installed with every iPhone are in the Wallpapers album. On the Cloud If you have enabled Photo Stream through Apple's iCloud service, your most recent images are automatically synced and stored online.

On Your Computer When you plug in your iPhone to your computer, Windows views the device as a portable, external drive and displays available media. Size Category Entertainment. Compatibility iPhone Requires iOS 9. Languages English. Price Free. App Support Privacy Policy.

Family Sharing With Family Sharing set up, up to six family members can use this app. More By This Developer. Palette Republic. Wallpaper Tree: 4K Wallpapers.

Social Networking. Fonts for You. You Might Also Like. Is there any way to export the photo that is currently set as the wallpaper, so that I can change the wallpaper to something else, but save the other one? You cannot export the wallpaper, depending on the pattern if it were repetitive it would be possible to take screen shots and after emailing these to your self you could edit in Photoshop other editing software is available.

You would need to take one shot of a page in iOS with only one app, and then if it is a repeatable patern you can edit out or clone out the app on the screen and the apps at the bottom. Alternatively you can or tap and hold an app to get to wiggle mode, and go to the far right to get a "clean" page, then screenshot this. As an expansion to Macjack's answer, here's the process I just followed to retrieve the lock screen wallpaper on my phone. However, the majority of them were not photos for me.

So I wrote a small script to extract the photos and rename them so they have the proper file extension. This makes it possible to use the image carousel preview for reviewing the images quickly. Get the script here. Now, open Terminal type 'terminal' into spotlight. Then copy and paste this into the terminal window:. And here is a description of what the script does.

Put your phone to charge so it will take almost all the UI down for a sec and print the screen. This will get you the image with the battery UI only, then you print another picture from the lock screen after you scrolled everything up or down.

On a Mac press Alt and select Go to in the menu bar. There open Library. Assure that you are in column view in the new window. There you will find strangely named folders with all the backed up files. Go through the one, that seems to be one that is the latest backup for your iPhone. You may want to check on which date you have created the latest backup for your iPhone in iTunes first. Some of the backed up files will have the same date.

In the right column you will see a preview of any selected file. Many files will be blank though. Copy the right one to another location on your computer and add. Open in Preview other any appropriate program. With that procedure I was able to recover the background that I had carried over from my first iPhone.

I had to go through a lot of files though. The desired one was about number of 4. I had the same problem, so I took a screenshot, uploaded it on that website and it found my image! If you let go of the pinch, it'll bounce back, so the trick is to pinch and screen grab at the same time.

Then you can crop out the wallpaper setting details in newly captured image in Photos. I was able to do this with four fingers on two hands no feet required : on an iPhone 4s, not sure how dexterous you need to be on an iPhone 6 or 6 plus. If your home screen wallpaper happens to be the same as your lock screen wallpaper then it is possible to extract the image with a screen grab.

With iOS 7 installed on my iPhone 5 and while viewing my lock screen I plugged a power cable into my phone. For a split second all the text overlays disappeared from my lock screen then a battery power status icon appeared. If you are quick you can take a screen grab of the clean wallpaper. I had spent a couple hours trying to figure out how to recover my lock screen image since the pic had been deleted from my camera roll long ago.

Just as I was giving up and was laying down to bed, I plugged my phone into it's charging cable. That's when I noticed the clear image. It was a life saver. I hope this helps. Otherwise when setting this newly captured image as a wallpaper it is automatically scaled up so you will lose some information around the edges. You can then sift through them and find the picture.

Sorting the folder by file size will help narrow it down. Edit to have no widgets present. You will be left with the time and date that you cannot get rid of, as well as the "edit" button, and the search bar at the top. Hold them out of view and the execute the screen grab. The only thing stuck on the pic is the search bar and the voice command button to the right of the search bar.

Easy if lock screen wallpaper just go to settings wallpaper the selet the lock screen one and pinch the wallpaper with fingers and bring it in the middle may take a few tries and thats when you screenshot. Crop later. I would Imagine, if you jailbreak, you can find where the file is stored on the iPhone's file-system. This would involve jailbreaking, and then installing a package like Samba. All you would have to do then is mount the iPhone from your desktop, and find the image.

Alternatively, there are a number of pieces of software that allow you to browse the iPhone filesystem over USB, again assuming the iPhone is jailbroken DiskAid is an example. Last, there are local file managers for the iPhone, that would possible allow you to find the file and copy it directly on the iPhone. As you have set a photo as wallpaper the photo should still be listed under photos on your iPhone.

You can email that photo yourself.



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