![]() Then respond “Yes” to “Are you sure you want to change the artwork for multiple items?” question. Hover over the iTunes button in your task bar and the “Multiple Song Information” box will pop open.ģ) Now simply release your mouse over the empty Artwork panel and click OK. So to save you the trouble of figuring it for yourself, here’s a short tutorial.ġ) Open iTunes and select an entire album (using the shift or control key to select multiple songs) and then right click to open the “Get Info” dialog box.Ģ) Open a browser window with the album cover art you want, and click and drag the image over to iTunes. I had fooled around with doing this once or twice before, but didn’t find it intuitive. For starters, let iTunes take another crack at it: right-click the song and choose Get Album Artwork. ![]() This also applies to an overall album artwork added to the folder rather than files. Unfortunately, this appears to work for just about any format except WAV. ![]() Select the Artwork tab then drag your picture from Finder into there. Songs purchased at the iTunes Music Store already come with art, but not those ripped from CD or purchased at eMusic (or elsewhere.) Fortunately, it’s a simple matter to manually add artwork to any song that needs it. Just find the track or the entire album in iTunes, select it then hit Cmd i to get info. Now that both the iPod nano and regular iPods have color screens to display album cover artwork, I decided to learn how to add cover art to my iTunes collection.
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