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Aura, a company known for its range of smart photo frames, this fall introduced the Walden, its largest photo frame to date. Measuring in at 15 inches, the Walden has a huge display that makes digital photos a focal point in the home.

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We've previously reviewed (and liked) the 9-inch Aura Mason frame, but the new Walden model is 66 percent larger and it is also Aura's first frame that can be mounted on the wall, so we thought we'd revisit the smart frames ahead of the holidays.

In terms of size, the Walden frame is 15.7 inches long, 12.7 inches tall, and 1.2 inches in depth, so it's a little bit thicker than your average photo frame. Compared to the 9-inch Mason frame, the Walden frame is much more eye-catching in a room because of the space that it takes up on a wall. A 9-inch frame looks odd when hung on the wall, but a 15-inch frame is the ideal size for it.

The Walden Frame fits right in on a wall in the living room, entry way, or bedroom, but it can also be placed on a table or other surface if desired with the built-in stand. The display is bright, the colors are largely accurate (the frame tends to add some saturation) and the images look vibrant, but one downside is that it is limited to a 1600x1200 resolution with 133 pixels per inch.

Aura's smaller frames all have better pixel density, and the resolution does impact the quality here. The Mason frame with the same resolution and a smaller size looks better up close, but the resolution is not a dealbreaker. Aura is using a matte display that has anti-reflective coating, so even in a bright room with sunlight or lights that hit the glass, the pictures are visible.

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The frame itself is black with a textured white mat around the display. The mat feels about standard size for a photo frame of this size, so it blends in well with other picture frames that you might have. Unfortunately, there are no other frame colors available, and that's one of the main downsides of the Walden.

Aura does have other frames fthat come in different colors and without mats, but on the whole, color selection is limited. On the plus side, the thin frame of the Walden does look sleek, but I am torn on the mat size with some of the images.

The Walden frame can be positioned in either horizontal or landscape mode as it supports both orientations with a 4:3 aspect ratio. Your photos will rotate and resize to fit in the frame regardless of the orientation you choose, but it is best to pick the position that fits the majority of your photos.

aura-frame-landscape.jpg

When you put the frame in a specific orientation and it displays a photo in another orientation, one of two things happens. It either crops in to the main subject of the photo, or it adds black bars so the whole image remains visible. For portrait mode images that are close to the subject with nothing to crop in to, this means that you'll see bars at the sides of the frame, which doesn't always look great with the white matte. You can opt to have photo backgrounds used as filler, kind of like what YouTube does for portrait images, in landscape mode, but it still looks off.

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When the frame is in portrait mode, landscape images are typically cut off because they're zoomed in to fit, so there are compromises to be made if you have a lot of images in both orientations. I do think Aura's frames do a decent job of making images look as good as possible by zooming in.

Aura ships the Walden with both a tabletop kickstand and a mounting kit, so you can display it wherever it fits best into your home. The mounting kit uses a single Floreat-style hanger, so it's just one nail that goes in the wall. These hangers are strong, so there's little risk of the frame falling down, plus wall damage is limited to the size of a nail hole.

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Touch controls at the top of the frame can be used for turning it on and off, changing the photos, viewing details like the date, playing Live Photos, deleting photos, and liking photos that were added to the frame by someone else, but all of these actions can also be done through the app if the frame is somewhere that's inaccessible.

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The Walden, like all of Aura's frames, is meant to be a more hands-off product. You basically upload images to it and leave it plugged in. It'll cycle through the images every 10 minutes by default, though you can change that in the app. There are a huge range of times to select from 15 seconds to 24 hours, so you can find the perfect photo change interval.

You can upload both photos and videos to the frame, and videos can be set to autoplay. Videos play without sound by default, but can be replayed with sound using the in-app remote or with the touch controls at the top. Speaker volume is controlled in the app.

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The frame is set to turn on when it's light out and turn off when it's dark, but there is an option for an on/off schedule for rooms where the frame might not be able to use its ambient light sensor well or for when you want it active at specific times. I do wish the Walden had better dimming and color matching. With bright images, it can be a little too bright when the room is darker, and it isn't able to match the color temperature of lighting. You'll sometimes get a blue-toned photo that looks odd in a room with soft yellow lighting.

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The app has a built-in remote control accessed through the settings section, and this provides easy access for deleting an image, resizing it properly, playing a video, or switching to the next image. Resizing is particularly useful because if you don't like the way Aura has opted to crop an image, you can fix it and the frame will remember that position going forward... Click here to read rest of article

Article Link: Review: Aura's 15" Walden Smart Photo Frame Makes a Touching Gift
 
So, the frame is 15" - what size is the display? Also, is it an IPS or VA display or a crappy TN-Panel (which I wouldn't want in a photo frame due to it's bad color rendition and viewing angles)? How secure is the cloud solution? (I think it's pretty ugly as well, but tastes are like a**h***s - everybody got one)
 
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So, the frame is 15" - what size is the display? Also, is it an IPS or VA display or a crappy TN-Panel (which I wouldn't want in a photo frame due to it's bad color rendition and viewing angles)?

Display is 15" diagonal.
 
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I read the title as `Apple's 15" Walled Garden Smart Photo Frame` while scrolling, lol.
 
I’d love a massive, high res, borderless smart frame. Haven’t seen anything on the market though haven’t really been paying attention. I think in the future people will hang smart frames on walls instead of art as it’s an incredible thing to be able to change your art at different times or day season.
 
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So, the frame is 15" - what size is the display? Also, is it an IPS or VA display or a crappy TN-Panel (which I wouldn't want in a photo frame due to it's bad color rendition and viewing angles)? How secure is the cloud solution? (I think it's pretty ugly as well, but tastes are like a**h***s - everybody got one)
The outer frame is 20.1”. The Aura frames are all IPS. They encrypt the images with AES-256 on AWS. Three minutes of googling, though I have no interest in such picture frames.
 
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My parents we gifted a different Aura frame. It was the worst setup experience I can recall. It definitely isn't intuitive. I had a very hard time with it keeping it's network connect, then magically one day it stopped having network issues. I wouldn't spend the money one one, but I guess as a gift for my parents, they like it.
 
Kind of a blast from the past in a way. PhotoVu made digital photo frames (with a lot more options for the frame itself) *long* ago; those frames used a Linux controller and could be run remotely using an iPhoto library on a networked machine as the source. How long ago? *2003* Long enough that visitors were visibly startled when the picture in the frame was changing. PhotoVu went out of business some time ago (2010) and its been a surprise that it took this long for something like it to reappear. Frankly, those frames are still not as flexible (Meural might be, haven't looked hard). My PhotoVu died a couple years ago and I hacked together a new screen and a Raspberry Pi controller to keep it on my wall. Why this market has been so listless is beyond me with the shear magnitude of digital photography people are engaged in.
 
I just wanted to jump in and share that based on Juli's initial review of Aura frames in March (and reinforced by other reviews, like at The Wirecutter, and my sister-in-law (whose parents have one and really like it)) I bought an Aura Mason Luxe (9.7", 2K resolution, $229) for my 82 year-old mom and she loves it. She had no real interest in a digital frame until she became a great-grandmother and wanted to regularly see family pics, so I bought this model and a Carver Mat and she decided on the Mason Luxe due to its size, high resolution, and innocuous frame. Setup was a breeze, and within an hour of setting it up all of my siblings had downloaded the app on their smartphones and started uploading pics for her. I also went back home and used the web uploader to handle pics from my Photos library, and had no technical issues with it at all. She's had one connectivity issue with the frame during the 6 months she's had it, and it was resolved by unplugging it and plugging it back in (which has been a huge help, as she's not tech savvy and I live over 600 miles away and can't easily come by to assist her with tech issues). We currently have over 1800 pics rotating through the frame from the cloud storage (including digitized slides from 1964 - 1995) and it's been terrific. She regularly lets me know how much joy its brought her (and my siblings really like it, too, as they have access to the album and can see and comment on each other's uploads and new memorable pictures that are being shared). I don't work for Aura, nor do I have any skin in the game regarding their sales - I've just had a great experience with this product and others may benefit it from it, too.
 
I remember buying one of these tacky digital frames for my grandparents like 15 years ago. Prettty sure they used it once cus who wants something always drawing power to run low res photos on….
 
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Thanks - how are brightness/viewing angles and contrast when compared to the studio display next to it?
Well, it doesn't compare to the Studio Display in terms of resolution or color accuracy, but honestly, it's not that bad. The brightness is decent, it's bright enough that it's visible in bright rooms with some sun, and it does dim down when the lights are not as bright. I think the colors can be oversaturated when it's showing images at max brightness. Viewing angle is good for a display at this cost, I don't see much of a loss of contrast at all.
 
I’d love a massive, high res, borderless smart frame. Haven’t seen anything on the market though haven’t really been paying attention. I think in the future people will hang smart frames on walls instead of art as it’s an incredible thing to be able to change your art at different times or day season.
These definitely exist. https://blackdove.com/collections/premium-digital-canvas
 
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