Click “Camera Roll” to view all of your photos. [2] X Research source Clicking a photo will add it to the “pile” of photos to be downloaded, shown at the bottom of the screen. To add an entire batch of photos to the download pile, click “Select All” next to the date the photos were added. If you use Flickr albums to store your photo and want to download an entire album, click “Albums,” then select an album to download.

If you’ve selected one image, the message will say “Download 1 photo. ” Click the message box to choose where to save it on your computer. The download will begin. If you’ve selected multiple photos (or an entire album), the message will say “Download zip. ” Click the message to create a single zip file, then choose a folder to save your zip file. When the download is complete, locate the zip file. Windows users, double-click the zip file, then click “Extract” to unpack the images. Mac users can double-click the zip file to extract the images to the current folder. [3] X Research source

The higher the resolution, the larger the image. If you don’t see many higher resolutions, the image may just be small, or the owner of the image has chosen not to share all sizes.

Open the Chrome Web Store[4] X Research source and locate Flickr Downloadr. Click “Add to Chrome,” then confirm by clicking “Add app. ”

Clicking a photo adds it to your download pile. If you change your mind about a photo, click it again. To select all photos you’ve viewed thus far in the search results, click the square icon beneath the photos.

Each image will be downloaded separately so there’s no need to unzip any files. If a user has not enabled the original size of their images to be downloaded, Flickr Downloadr will fetch the next best possible quality photo.