I have a very simple WPF app which is used to preview images in any given folder one image at a time. You can think of it as a Windows Image Viewer clone. The app has a PreviewK
Call .Freeze()
on the bitmap object, this sets it in to a read-only state and releases some of the handles on it that prevents it from getting GC'ed.
Another thing you can do is you can tell the BitmapImage to bypass caching, the memory you see building up could be from the cache.
CurrentImage.Source = new BitmapImage(new Uri(currentFile),
new RequestCachePolicy(RequestCacheLevel.BypassCache));
Lastly, if there is not a lot of programs running on the computer putting memory pressure on the system .net is allowed to wait as long as it wants for a GC. Doing a GC is slow and lowers performance during the GC, if a GC is not necessary because no one is requesting the ram then it does not do a GC.