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#1 |
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Huge iPhoto Library
iPhoto has been slugging along for a while. Last I checked... (long time ago) my iPhoto library was about 26GB. Well.... I just checked.. and my iPhoto library is now 260GB!!!
I have about 30k in photos and videos. I use a Canon 7D camera (not in RAW), so the files are pretty large nowadays. But the other thing I can think of is that it has to make multiple size files for iPhone and iPad. Anyone else have this large of an iPhoto library? Any thoughts on how to tame it? I guess I need to go in and delete all the crappy pictures, but that's such a painstaking task. |
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#2 |
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Changing the subject...
... if you have 30K pictures, you should probably consider switching to Aperture or Lightroom. I have a similar sized library as yours (51K pictures with about 240 GB of data)... and I cannot even imagine how painful that would be in iPhoto. Personally, I use Aperture because I like how it plugs into all of the Apple Apps painlessly. I know people who use Lightroom and like that as well. /Jim |
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#3 |
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Agreed. They're both great products, it's about which one you like more. You're definitely at a level above iPhoto and should be looking at more robust tools.
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#4 |
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If you're really into iPhoto (or just don't wanna pay more for Aperture (and btw wait cuz Aperture may be out soon some say)) try iPhoto Library Manager. It helps to split up photos into different libraries, although switching requires restarting iPhoto. I find it just makes it a big more manageable. You can do sorta the same thing by using Option> doubleclick when opening iPhoto, but iPhoto Library Manager gives you some more control over the whole process.
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#5 |
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Definitely consider switching to a more capable app. I vastly prefer Lightroom (though I used Aperture for about a year), and it's also super-cheap: just $80 (formerly $300, I think). iPhoto is nice for a while, but it's just not meant for that kind of volume.
That said, try them both and see which you enjoy using more. Lightroom is (to me) more intuitive and much prettier, but very modal (you do things one at a time, and can't just fly all over the place); Aperture is more flexible in terms of not dictating your workflow, but ultimately feels more "dense" and cumbersome. The current version of Aperture is a major leap forward, but has been around for a very long time. Hope that helps.
__________________
iPhone 5/32, iPad(1)/32, 15" Unibody MBP 2.66/8/1 TB internal storage @ 7200/no optical drive AppCulture: The Future of Interface Design - iPad/iPhone & beyond My Photography |
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#6 |
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If you decide to buy Aperture... or even if you just want to evaluate its potential... I strongly recommend getting Robert Boyers ebooks which are very inexpensive... and probably the single best few bucks to spend in learning about photo management. He uses both LR and Aperture, but he seems to like Aperture better. Even just searching his blog is eye opening.
I think it is http://photo.rwboyer.com/. I would recommend the organization and file management books to start. /Jim Last edited by flynz4; Apr 22, 2012 at 05:57 PM. |
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#7 |
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Thanks for the input, folks.
Wondering though, if anyone else has a similar size iPhoto library. And if they've been able to reduce it at all? Can I get rid of the iPhone/iPad size duplicates? Are there places I'm not looking for to get rid of more iPhoto library size? (like iPhoto trash) |
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#8 |
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Have you considered creating multiple libraries?
http://howto.cnet.com/8301-11310_39-...oto-libraries/ It's not an ideal solution, but if you don't want to spend extra money on Aperture, it'll work. I really wish that apple would improve support for using multiple libraries though. You should be able to open two libraries side by side, or easily switch between libraries in the file pulldown. |
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#9 | |
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Quote:
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#10 |
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Probably, I tend to use the original library about 90% of the time, so I haven't bothered trying any. You could have a look on macupdate.com. BTW the same process works for iTunes. It's useful if you have multiple macs and want to keep a very large lossless + high quality movie library, but also a slimmed down AAC library.
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#11 | |
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Quote:
Sorry to be blunt... but you are trying the drive a nail with a screwdriver. Get the right tools for the job. /Jim |
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#12 | |
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Quote:
I guess the main thing is... I need to spend a good amount to time going through an deleting bad pictures. (I tend to snap away) |
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#13 | |
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Quote:
Within A3... every image master lives in just one single and unique project. A master can only live in 1 project. You can (if you choose) keep your masters on an external drive... and then use smart albums to make collections of your best images that you can keep on your computer. To do this, you would use "Referenced Masters"... meaning the master images would be in a location specified by you (ex: external USB drive)... but your albums could remain within your A3 library. To edit photos, you would need to attach the drive... but you could have many/most/all (your choice) of your pictures with you on your laptop even when the drive is not connected. This is because the albums would contain what A3 calls "versions". Read Boyer's books... it will become clear. They are the best investment that I can imaging for anyone trying to figure out the steps of creating a photo strategy. If you can afford taking 30K pictures, then you can afford (time or money) reading a pair of $6 ebooks that are 25 - 50 pages each. You will see that there are tools (A3, and presumably LR) that will do this job for you. Exactly. Even if you were to cull your 30K photos to a size that fits in your computer, then it is still too large to ever "use" those pictures. A digital asset manager, or DAM (A3 or LR) is the difference between "storing" and "using" your pictures. There are a lot of people here trying to help you. Take their advice. /Jim Last edited by flynz4; Apr 23, 2012 at 04:15 AM. |
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#14 |
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Cool, thanks for the info, Jim!
I'll look into the books. |
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#15 |
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My experience on an old 2007 iMac 2.4 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo with 4GB of RAM is that iPhoto slows down dramatically above about 20,000 images / 20-40 GB Library size. Planning to buy a new iMac as soon as they come out, mainly due to the slow iPhoto speed with these size libraries.
If you want to stick with iPhoto, I highly recommend getting iPhoto Library Manager (ILM). I have over 80,000 pictures in multiple iPhoto Libraries (~175 GB total), with a lot of time invested in organizing, and adding ratings, keywords, and faces. ILM allows you to move events or albums between Libraries while preserving the ratings, keywords, faces, etc. As another post stated, iPhoto and ILM make you close and open iPhoto when switching between Libraries. The one key feature missing from ILM is the ability to move books, calendars, and cards between Libraries. Another thing ILM handles is sync'ing photos to multiple iOS devices. It allows you to export photos to folders and automatically keep them in sync with iPhoto for each individual iOS device. You then sync the folders with your iOS devices. This is much easier than having to sync from scratch with each iOS device (due to there only being a single iPod Photo Cache folder inside each iPhoto Library for a single iOS device). Wish Apple would acquire ILM and add its functionality to iPhoto. I also have Aperture, but have never invested the time in understanding how its "Library" mechanism differs or coexists with iPhoto. That is long overdue on my to do list. Last edited by iKenny303; Apr 23, 2012 at 03:17 PM. Reason: Added comments about Aperture |
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#16 |
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sharing said huge library
I too, have a large iphoto library. I have sharing enabled and others can view my images, but is there a solution whereby those sharers can actually create folders and download those images to their machines without having to come ask me for it? Will Aperture or LR do that?
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#17 |
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Tame iphoto
Hi:
1. When you download, edit mercilessly. Keep the "keepers", dump the rest. 2. When you finish dumping, fill in all the blanks on the keepers, labeling names, gps.... 3. Now you can find your precious memories, but.... 4. Make a 2nd iphoto on a separate drive and only keep current material on your hard drive, e.g., stuff you haven't had time to edit. 5. Now you you can make a slide show (or whatever) for your main computer of the best and most important images. There are lots of tremendous ideas in reply to your question, but I do believe that editing is the key. Hope this helps. |
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#18 | |
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Quote:
__________________
"It is just that heavy metal musicians write in minor keys, and when you do that, you frighten people." - Ronnie James Dio (RIP) Flickr |
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#19 |
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Very good advice in here -- I do not have nearly this size library, but I can already 'feel' the pressure of not having been diligent in properly keeping up with my photos.
__________________
~ 24" Aluminum 2.4GHz iMac / 4 GB SDRAM ~ iPhone 4 Black 16GB ~ iPad 3G 16GB
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#20 |
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Why is everyone so keen to make iPhoto work? It's not a good piece of software is it?
I just bit the bullet and deleted iPhoto and its library. Freed up 20GB of my little SSD. Very happy. |
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#21 |
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My Library is 250GB. And iPhoto is the worst performing App I have.
What did you finally got, Aperture or Lightroom? Which is the faster one?
__________________
And now what is NeXT? |
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#22 |
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#23 |
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My iPhoto library is ~ 360GB. My Aperture library is well over 50GB.
Aperture is for my pro shots and the iPhoto is for photo's my wife wants to access and general stuff. I am about to split my iPhoto library because it is painfully slow for me and my wife. I just made a copy, picked an end date, and then deleted accordingly in both libraries. |
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#24 |
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Why is aperture better for large iPhoto libraries?
Over a good few years, with SLR becoming cheaper, surely everyone will have large libraries. I have a large library as i include the videos taken in the same album as i like to group them in one place. When SSD's are so cheap that they come standard 4TB drives for 100 bucks, i'm sure none of this will matter anymore at which time, the average iPhoto library will be 500GB |
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#25 |
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What about a 'faces' type feature?
Does either Aperture or Lightroom has a faces type feature?
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~ 24" Aluminum 2.4GHz iMac / 4 GB SDRAM
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