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fab5freddy
May 20, 2008, 02:20 PM
i have just imported some photos into iPhoto, but cannot find the
original location of the photos....
There is no 'Show in Finder' Option......

There is just an iPhoto Library.....



big_malk
May 20, 2008, 02:25 PM
In iPhoto, right click on a photo and choose "Show file" it'll reveal it in Finder.

To brows your iPhoto library in Finder, go to Pictures folder in your home folder, right click on 'iPhoto library' and choose 'Show package contents'. From there you can open 'originals' and it should be arranged by year then date. There also other stuff, like modified copies etc that you can just explore yourself.

ChrisA
May 20, 2008, 07:13 PM
i have just imported some photos into iPhoto, but cannot find the
original location of the photos....
There is no 'Show in Finder' Option......

There is just an iPhoto Library.....

First off "Why?' Are your just curious? If so,then they are inside the iPhoto library in the Pictures folder. You can right click on the library and then select "show package content. But iPhoto hides them this way for a good reason. It's to prevent you from messing with them.

You really should never have to know where the files are. If you need an image file to include in an email or web page the "correct" way go is to export the file to the dektop from iPhoto

fab5freddy
May 21, 2008, 02:43 AM
ok, what if you need a copy of the photo at 560 x 456 pixels ?

Can you export at any pixel size ?

big_malk
May 21, 2008, 07:19 AM
ok, what if you need a copy of the photo at 560 x 456 pixels ?

Can you export at any pixel size ?

Yes. Well, I think it insists you keep it in proportion.

Or, you could just drag the photo from iPhoto straight into you image editing application, then just 'save as' where ever you want the altered copy.

ORR you can specify an external image editor in iPhoto preferences, then right click on the photo > Edit in external editor

fab5freddy
May 21, 2008, 01:06 PM
i just don't like the way, iPhoto hides your photos,
so you have to push "show package contents"........

so, i guess there is no way to get into package contents
without right clicking......?

gauchogolfer
May 21, 2008, 01:12 PM
i just don't like the way, iPhoto hides your photos,
so you have to push "show package contents"........

so, i guess there is no way to get into package contents
without right clicking......?

Yes indeed. It requires a bit of a different approach to your photo organization, but one that I've come to like. Having iPhoto 'hide' your photo isn't a bad thing, since you can always drag a copy to the desktop to play with if you like. Exporting in whatever size/format you're likely to want is possible too.

skybolt
May 21, 2008, 01:32 PM
i just don't like the way, iPhoto hides your photos,
so you have to push "show package contents"........

so, i guess there is no way to get into package contents
without right clicking......?

Just because you CAN does not mean you SHOULD. Do not do anything to your photos in the library in finder. Forget they are there! Follow the advice already given and work from within the app. iPhoto keeps your photos safe in its own way, and in a way that it can access. Any messing about in the library in finder will render iPhoto useless. Just work from within the app and forget that the library in finder is there. There is NEVER a need to go into the library in finder.

fab5freddy
May 22, 2008, 01:28 AM
well Mary, what if you need a specific format like,
1682 x 1235 pixel TIFF format in High Quality ?

Is iPhoto that customizable ?

thanks!

big_malk
May 22, 2008, 02:40 AM
well Mary, what if you need a specific format like,
1682 x 1235 pixel TIFF format in High Quality ?

Is iPhoto that customizable ?

thanks!

TIFF is an option, although I don't think you can choose the quality of TIFFs in iPhoto, why don't you just have a look yourself :p

Even if it's not got enough export options for you, you still don't need to go poking around in the library when there's all these options to open the photo in other apps from within iPhoto.

Roy Hobbs
May 22, 2008, 08:51 AM
well Mary, what if you need a specific format like,
1682 x 1235 pixel TIFF format in High Quality ?

Is iPhoto that customizable ?

thanks!

Like others have said in the thread, drag the pic to the desktop and make whatever changes you need. But don't mess around with files in Finder.

I have seen many iPhoto librarys destroyed because a user wanted to see the files and mess with them from finder.

Most of these people were recent switchers are were still in the windows frame of mind.

krye
May 22, 2008, 11:46 AM
True, you can right click on the library and show the contents. But Apple highly recommends not making any change from within that directory. You can hose your entire library. Add and remove pics from iPhoto itself.

AxisOfBeagles
May 22, 2008, 11:55 AM
what if you need a specific format like,
1682 x 1235 pixel TIFF format in High Quality ?

Is iPhoto that customizable ?

No - but it's very easy to launch image, from within iPoto, in an external editor and do so. iPhoto's real strength is it's seamless inventory management, not it's editing capabilities.

ChrisA
May 22, 2008, 01:41 PM
well Mary, what if you need a specific format like,
1682 x 1235 pixel TIFF format in High Quality ?

Is iPhoto that customizable ?


Yes you can do that although "High Quality" was no meaning when you are creating a TIFF file. (Maybe you are thingking of JPG files.) When you export from iPhoto you can specify the format.

But I do the your point. What if you needed some exotic format that iPhoto could not do? You best bet in that case would be to from within iPhoto, export the image to the desktop then use some other software. Or if Photoshop were installed as your "external editor" double click the image in iPhoto to bring it up inside Photoshop then inside PS do a "Save As.." and save to the desired format.
But in not case do you ever need to where iPhoto stores the file.

bking1000
May 22, 2008, 04:24 PM
Click on the photo you want, click "export" from I think the file menu (?). You can just export the original, or you can pull from the drop-down to export tiff, jpg, etc. in different quality and size settings. However, I don't think you can specify the pixels. You have to crop the picture to the pixel size you want, and then export.

If you simply want to export a jpg as-is, just drag to the desktop.

sachadon
Jun 28, 2009, 09:33 PM
I don't understand why to keep the .jpg in secret place? what if I want to go back to windows an export all my 10 Gb of photos. How can I do that.

spellflower
Sep 20, 2009, 03:26 PM
No reason to ever get to the raw files, huh? Maybe if you're talking about a desktop with a gigantic hard drive, or you don't take many pictures, but if you have a laptop and like photography you'll find your machine starting to lag unless you clear off some files.

This requires going into the library and deleting stuff after backing it up on an external. Which requires right (or in my case, CTRL clicking). Which I always forget, which requires me to google, "where are my photos" and find threads like this to remind me. So, thanks for the help.

Elbert C
Sep 21, 2009, 03:16 AM
No reason to ever get to the raw files, huh? Maybe if you're talking about a desktop with a gigantic hard drive, or you don't take many pictures, but if you have a laptop and like photography you'll find your machine starting to lag unless you clear off some files.

This requires going into the library and deleting stuff after backing it up on an external. Which requires right (or in my case, CTRL clicking). Which I always forget, which requires me to google, "where are my photos" and find threads like this to remind me. So, thanks for the help.

No need to ctrl click > show packages to delete files. iPhoto > Photo menu > Move to Trash deletes originals, including raw files. Just don't forget to empty the iPhoto Trash after.

mikeasmel
Nov 10, 2009, 10:37 PM
how to i find the photos in my browser to load to Kodak Gallery from a mac? I don't have a right click on my mouse and can't find the photos?

windowpain
Nov 10, 2009, 11:06 PM
..I don't have a right click on my mouse ..

If you hold 'control' while clicking it will act as a right click.

raychee34
Dec 24, 2009, 02:24 PM
So if i drag the photo I want from iphoto and then lets say I want to upload it to walmart.com or something.. after I am done uploading it can I delete it from the desktop and it will still be in iphoto??

pdxflint
Dec 24, 2009, 04:23 PM
So if i drag the photo I want from iphoto and then lets say I want to upload it to walmart.com or something.. after I am done uploading it can I delete it from the desktop and it will still be in iphoto??

In a word... yes. But if you're going to upload to a website, you might be better off exporting from the iPhoto menu, selecting filetype (most likely .jpg) and quality, and you can select custom size, and make whatever size you want, select destination folder - boom. Done! If you want a weird size, like 512 x 483 or something like that, then you either have to crop the shape to the same aspect ratio, then export while defining the long side as 512pixels long, or simply edit in an editing program that will let you see the dimensions as you crop (I wish iPhoto would do this, BTW.)

I don't use iPhoto much, but on occasion it comes in handy, and especially when using other Apple apps that link to the iPhoto library. I changed my preferences to import photos without copying them. I did this because when I import my originals from my camera I don't use iPhoto for this purpose, and have my own file system for that. I don't need the duplicates copied on my hard drive just for iPhoto to have it's own copy, but it still works just as well... I guess there are lots of different ways one could do all of this...

Chappers
Dec 24, 2009, 04:31 PM
So if i drag the photo I want from iphoto and then lets say I want to upload it to walmart.com or something.. after I am done uploading it can I delete it from the desktop and it will still be in iphoto??

Yes and see above post too (thanks pdxflint)

Macshroomer
Dec 24, 2009, 05:11 PM
First off "Why?' Are your just curious? If so,then they are inside the iPhoto library in the Pictures folder. You can right click on the library and then select "show package content. But iPhoto hides them this way for a good reason. It's to prevent you from messing with them.

You really should never have to know where the files are. If you need an image file to include in an email or web page the "correct" way go is to export the file to the dektop from iPhoto

This is without a doubt the most insane thing I have ever heard of regarding data asset / drive capacity management. If I ran my half a million + image library like that, I would be out of business. iPhoto may be fine for amateurs, but it is a terrible program in terms of workflow / accountability for a professional.

bking1000
Dec 25, 2009, 07:25 PM
This is without a doubt the most insane thing I have ever heard of regarding data asset / drive capacity management. If I ran my half a million + image library like that, I would be out of business. iPhoto may be fine for amateurs, but it is a terrible program in terms of workflow / accountability for a professional.

This is a given. Are you just realizing that now? iPhoto is a photo manager and a basic DAM for home and amateur use. I'm sure there could be pros out there using it, but that's not it's intended audience. Aperture is the Apple Pro Ap, for example. There are, of course, others.

cz9h3d
Dec 27, 2009, 11:21 AM
As a recent Mac newbie (iMac i7), I can't help but smile as I read questions from others similar to my own ;) I don't mind throwing away all my PC expertise, extensive photography file structure, and naming convention, but some things still "irk me".

My wife wanted me to resize some images so she could email them to her editor. This is a common occurrence. I had about 2 minutes to do the job, and of course couldn't quickly/easily figure out how to resize in iPhoto in that time period! I defaulted to Elements (30 day trial, I used it on the PC), quickly resided, saved the files with a new name - BUT I COULDN'T FIND THE FILES to attach to the email!!!! So I again resized, and saved to the desktop.

I know I just need to do some more research/learning, but I get frustrated when I can't do the most basic of things. I know iPhoto keeps all originals -
(1) how do I get access to originals, as well as edited versions if they're all in the library? Will they all show up in iPhoto?
(2) would I be better served to not "copy items to the photo library" as I did when I imported all my photos from an external drive? Would this then allow me to both use iPhoto's cataloging features, but also still have all my images in a nice orderly file structure defined by me? But what happens to any edits then?
(3) My wife routinely edits images for her editor - does it really make sense to have to save them to the desktop for emailing (she uses web-based email)? I'd like to keep these images too, which certainly isn't supported if I'm always exporting to the desktop - is it?

I looked at various iLife/iPhoto books to make me smarter, but I'm not convinced they really answer these kind of questions.

Best regards! P.S. I'm going to make myself love this mac - it cost too darn much to stay frustrated!

Pomeroy
Dec 27, 2009, 03:31 PM
Have you tried the Email button at the bottom of iPhoto?? Select the photos you want to email and click the email button ( bottom right ) and a dialog box will pop up and let you select from several sizes or just drag the selected photos to the dock and drop on the email icon and a button will appear on the bottom right of your email to let you select the size.

This may work better for your wife with web based mail. Drag the photos from iPhoto to the dock and drop on the Preview icon and then go to the tools menu and select "Adjust Size" and make any size you want.

iPhoto is not going to let you work on the original, but you can make a copy by going to the Photos menu and click on "Duplicate" and then revert the first photo to the original by going back to the the Photos menu and select "Revert to Original", this will give you a copy to work on and still be able to see what the original looks like. There may be other ways to do this also. I do it this way sometimes if I want to have more than one version of a photo.

cz9h3d
Dec 27, 2009, 06:28 PM
Okay - I'll try to stop the complaining. I learn more each day! Spent some time at the bookstore reading through a few manuals. Now my only regret is that I wasn't more knowledgeable when I first imported all my photos into the library! Looks like I actually could keep my originals outside of the library and still have iPhoto use them as the originals, but I don't see much use in that. My wife's business pics are definitely getting their own library! I might just start over with my main library, as I've got a lot of doubles from where I previous had originals and edited photos - not sure how I'll handle that - might just revert to the originals, and not imported the edited files.

I found the email solution today for sending resized images - that will work great - although I can't say I'm totally happy with mail and how it plays with my hotmail and gmail accounts at present (doesn't pull over the folders) - but that's an issue for another forum!

judderman62
Mar 25, 2010, 07:07 PM
I cannot believe this thread :eek::eek::rolleyes:

I have now been an imac owner for approx 9/10 months having been swayed by my brother and the umpteen times I've heard and read the old "i'd never go back to a pc" /"wish I'd switched earlier" line that one hears so much.

well I have to say I am hugely underwhelmed and never has the concept of emperors new clothes been better demonstrated to me than all the hype over macs.

this new discovery, found as I could not find my photos using my newly downloaded Canon DPP software, that iphoto actually holds my photos prisoners from errr me just takes the biscuit.

what a ******* joke.

well for me it's the opposite - never again will I go for a mac.

my computer prevents me from doing what I WANT with my own photos and only lets me do what it wants in the package it decides I can use !!! :mad::mad:

The biggest joke for me is that Macs are supposedly particularly well suited to photographers !!!!! ehmmmm no I don't think so

ChrisA
Mar 25, 2010, 07:21 PM
well Mary, what if you need a specific format like,
1682 x 1235 pixel TIFF format in High Quality ?

Is iPhoto that customizable ?

thanks!

Then export an image as a 1682 x 1235 pixel TIFF. (But that is pointless if the original was a JPG.)

ChrisA
Mar 25, 2010, 07:34 PM
(2) would I be better served to not "copy items to the photo library" as I did when I imported all my photos from an external drive? Would this then allow me to both use i



You are just like the 1020' farmer who just bought his first car, can't figure it out and wants his horse back. Just stick with it. Some concepts are new. For example that an image can exist in many "smart folders" at the same time but still only be in one physical place on the disk. Or that smart folders select images based on rules. These concepts are new. You will get used to them and one day see how limiting a folder structure is.

For example. Say you have a photo of John and Mary in San Diego, CA taken may 1965. Do you file this by date (5/1965) or to you place this with other shots of Mary or in John's stack? Using a more modern system you'd file the photo under ALL of those and more. Most of my photos end up in a dozen folders -- but still have only one copy on the disk.

I'm guessing you don't have many photos. Once you get into tens of thousands of them "orderly folders" just don't work unless you only have need to find them by one method. Such as a wedding photographer would nly ever look them up by "Client Name".

H2Ockey
Mar 25, 2010, 07:44 PM
I cannot believe this thread :eek::eek::rolleyes:


Here I quoted about as much of your post as it seems you read in this thread.

Had you TRIED to understand the advice given, repeatedly, to folks who, like you, came into this thread complainig about not being able to pull items out of a database to manipulate in a way that would mess up the database rather than learn and use the tool in the way it was meant you may have made a completely different post and your impressions of a mac might be different indeed.

I would try and reiterate what you need to hear but that would be falling on deaf ears... erm eyes I guess. RE-read the thread, understand iphoto is a database. You know an advanced system to catalog a massive amount of data, ie. photos. There are tools to let you do what you want with those photos. Swearing off a mac becasue you are too thick headed to try and learn a system that does work and is used by pro photographers is fine as well. You should understand however, coming here and complaining about it to people that understand that it is not iphoto and macs that don't make sense; it is those who are unwilling or maybe unable to learn new and better ways of doing something that is the real problem.

good luck.

judderman62
Mar 25, 2010, 08:01 PM
H not being able to pull items out of a database to manipulate in a way that would mess up the database .

do enlighten me then - how would editing with DPP "mess up the database" when it is non destructive. Also if this database as as magnificent as you profess - why could it not handle me opening abcd.jpg , editing it in DPP and saving edited version as abce.jpg ?

doesn't seem that impressive a database to me if I can't open a record re-save it with changes with another name without getting the whole database corrupted.

Also one of the myths one hears perpetuated is that macs make most things soooo much easier...well as someone has already pointed out the advice given (I have skimmed it a little ;)) entails not one but TWO extra steps - 1) drag to the desktop 2) drag to the bin when finished (one could argue emptying the bin actually makes it 3 steps but lets not provoke the mac fanboys further )

whereas on a PC I would have just navigated to the folder from any software that can open jpegs , make the changes and save as (either same place or somewhere else) dunno maybe I am a lil slow after all - but that seems quicker to me ... it is quicker that way isn't it ?...isn't it ?

Oh and btw ...don't take it too personally I am expressing my disappointment with my mac ..not having a go at you or your family - sense of perspective n all that ;)

H2Ockey
Mar 25, 2010, 08:37 PM
This article will explain what you would like i'm sure, better than I could.

http://www.macworld.com/article/143828/2009/11/referenced_library.html

The thing is, if you have a relatively small number of photos just plopping them all into a "my pictures" folder in different sub folders by ?date? title? whatever might be fine, but it really doesn't take that many to become overwhelming.

H2Ockey
Mar 25, 2010, 09:20 PM
Oh and btw ...don't take it too personally I am expressing my disappointment with my mac ..not having a go at you or your family - sense of perspective n all that ;)

Oh and btw, i don't take mac bashing personally in any way. I'm not that much of a fanboi as it were. I use bootcamp and my imac runs xp quite a bit for certain things. Maybe it is something else in the attitude in your post that comes accross poorly.

judderman62
Mar 26, 2010, 04:40 AM
This article will explain what you would like i'm sure, better than I could.

http://www.macworld.com/article/143828/2009/11/referenced_library.html

The thing is, if you have a relatively small number of photos just plopping them all into a "my pictures" folder in different sub folders by ?date? title? whatever might be fine, but it really doesn't take that many to become overwhelming.

I'll have a read of that - thanks.

No I have shed loads of photos - took 440 in an 8 hour session a couple of saturdays ago. I guess it depends how one wants to catalogue - venue, month.

I was in a little "playful" mood last night so did pile it on a little more than I might otherwise - sorry 'bout that - I get the devil in me from time to time :o

I'm still pretty underwhelmed with the mac all round and don't see what all the fuss is about and feel they are very over hyped.

Maybe I just don't understand the benefits ?

Somepix
Mar 26, 2010, 09:00 AM
Maybe I just don't understand the benefits ?

Maybe .... But remember what Ol' Steve says : THINK DIFFERENT !:cool:

BaldiMac
Mar 26, 2010, 09:22 AM
Also one of the myths one hears perpetuated is that macs make most things soooo much easier...well as someone has already pointed out the advice given (I have skimmed it a little ;)) entails not one but TWO extra steps - 1) drag to the desktop 2) drag to the bin when finished (one could argue emptying the bin actually makes it 3 steps but lets not provoke the mac fanboys further )

That advice is several years old. If you are running Leopard or Snow Leopard, you have direct access to your iPhoto library in the source list of any Open/Save dialog box. No extra steps.

H2Ockey
Mar 26, 2010, 03:10 PM
I'm still pretty underwhelmed with the mac all round and don't see what all the fuss is about and feel they are very over hyped.

Maybe I just don't understand the benefits ?

Part of it is the irrationality in these arguments, just like a silly Cannon v Nikon debate or vanilla v chocolate, pie v cake the most passionate are usually, influenced to a very strong degree by personal preference and unable to state many facts to back up their opinion they just resort to emotion.

My choice to go mac was two fold. I was getting into photography and had a friend show me aperture and explain/work with the database type management system. Macs are just better suited to run graphics type programs, much less memory intensive. Can't really compare price per spec as well because the performance at apparently lower specs for things like photo editing and graphics software. Really to run the good photo editing software in the same way I would have spent about the same amount building a PC with a lot of extra fluff as I paid for the mac... but it would have run games a whole lot better :rolleyes:

The other reason was my work had recently switched to vista on our computers. That... well put the OS in POS. Some have gone mac from pure spite at microsoft, I went mac not out of spite but in part from simple frustration.

As far as the folders vs iphoto/aperture type system. I would use the analogy that folders would be like a library that stored all their books in large boxes labled by type of book. Sure you can go to the right box, sift through it and pull out the book you want and replace it. But going to a filing system, looking up the book you want and pulling it out is much better.

judderman62
Mar 26, 2010, 05:48 PM
Part of it is the irrationality in these arguments, just like a silly Cannon v Nikon debate or vanilla v chocolate, pie v cake the most passionate are usually, influenced to a very strong degree by personal preference and unable to state many facts to back up their opinion they just resort to emotion.

My choice to go mac was two fold. I was getting into photography and had a friend show me aperture and explain/work with the database type management system. Macs are just better suited to run graphics type programs, much less memory intensive. Can't really compare price per spec as well because the performance at apparently lower specs for things like photo editing and graphics software. Really to run the good photo editing software in the same way I would have spent about the same amount building a PC with a lot of extra fluff as I paid for the mac... but it would have run games a whole lot better :rolleyes:

The other reason was my work had recently switched to vista on our computers. That... well put the OS in POS. Some have gone mac from pure spite at microsoft, I went mac not out of spite but in part from simple frustration.

As far as the folders vs iphoto/aperture type system. I would use the analogy that folders would be like a library that stored all their books in large boxes labled by type of book. Sure you can go to the right box, sift through it and pull out the book you want and replace it. But going to a filing system, looking up the book you want and pulling it out is much better.

very nicely put sir. Same here with the frustration thing and when my pc got hit by a trojan - I called the apple store, asked them what time they were open till (10 pm) and drove straight there and bought one.

There is plenty about microsoft that irks me - one of my faves that has me swearing at my computer is the old "do you want to save changes" when in fact you haven't made any - very tiresome Mr. Gates, very tiresome.

so with the more direct access with leopard (btw how come I couldn't access from Canon DPP then ??) does that then not have the negative impact talked about in this thread if files are changed ?

H2Ockey
Mar 27, 2010, 12:38 PM
so with the more direct access with leopard (btw how come I couldn't access from Canon DPP then ??) does that then not have the negative impact talked about in this thread if files are changed ?

I can't for the life of me remember the initial steps, but you can set an external editor in iphoto. I guess search for that. I just feel better keeping iphoto in the loop, exporting or opening through it so I don't lose the reference to an album or make a change that bugs the file so I can't find it again.

judderman62
Mar 27, 2010, 07:05 PM
I can't for the life of me remember the initial steps, but you can set an external editor in iphoto. I guess search for that. I just feel better keeping iphoto in the loop, exporting or opening through it so I don't lose the reference to an album or make a change that bugs the file so I can't find it again.

cheers - I think I have seen somewhere that one can do that - so if one does it that way does that mean it won't cause issues with the data base ?

thanks for all the replies folks :)

Alpj89
May 14, 2010, 03:56 AM
It is good to know the url for your photos in iPhoto if you i.e. are making a webpage by html editing in text editor.

So you can use the tag:
<img src="/Users/username/Picture/iPhoto%20Library/..."/>
to locate your photo in the iPhoto Library

=)

deadkennedy
Jul 31, 2010, 05:46 AM
First off "Why?' Are your just curious? If so,then they are inside the iPhoto library in the Pictures folder. You can right click on the library and then select "show package content. But iPhoto hides them this way for a good reason. It's to prevent you from messing with them.

You really should never have to know where the files are. If you need an image file to include in an email or web page the "correct" way go is to export the file to the dektop from iPhoto

This is just about the most retarded thing I've heard in years. That's why people hate Apple and think Apple users are moron fanbois.

marcelleqb
Nov 8, 2010, 02:19 PM
First off "Why?' Are your just curious? If so,then they are inside the iPhoto library in the Pictures folder. You can right click on the library and then select "show package content. But iPhoto hides them this way for a good reason. It's to prevent you from messing with them.

You really should never have to know where the files are. If you need an image file to include in an email or web page the "correct" way go is to export the file to the dektop from iPhoto

Please. What are we - 5 or something?

Designer Dale
Nov 8, 2010, 02:45 PM
Please. What are we - 5 or something?

You must be really bored. The post you quoted is 2 1/2 years old.

Dale

ToddJ
Nov 8, 2010, 03:08 PM
They really should do it more like iTunes where it really isn't a database per se. Or, better yet, like Picasa where it scans that hard drive and keeps them where you put them originally.

darrenparr
Jun 7, 2011, 09:47 AM
Hi all,

I have a similar question. I have backed up my entire library onto a 1tb external. I want to then delete my photos from iPhoto on the Mac...

When I delete any on the Mac and then open up the backup library they are still missing and the backup fails to reveal the deleted ones?? Am I doing something wrong or will this lose all my photos....

I really just want to see 15000 photo files and know they are there. Please can you help anyone?

ChrisA
Jun 8, 2011, 12:54 AM
Hi all,

I have a similar question. I have backed up my entire library onto a 1tb external. I want to then delete my photos from iPhoto on the Mac...

When I delete any on the Mac and then open up the backup library they are still missing and the backup fails to reveal the deleted ones?? Am I doing something wrong or will this lose all my photos....

I really just want to see 15000 photo files and know they are there. Please can you help anyone?

There s an index file that contains a list of the photos and pointers to the files. If you delete a photo from inside iphoto it removes the entry from the list. iphoto looks at the index and sees it as gone even if the image is still on your disk.

I think you only backed up the files and not the index

trevorhdavies
Jul 7, 2011, 02:56 PM
Hi. I found this thread because I was in exactly the same predicament and just as annoyed. I needed to clear my laptop and move the photos to my imac which is on an earlier version so would not import. Here is the definitive answer. Click once on the iphoto icon in 'pictures' whilst holding control. Menu opens up offering "Show package contents". Choose that and you will looking at your photo folders in finder. ;) Cheers.