Organize Your Digital Photos
Taking photos with your digital camera is fun, easy, and addictive. Suddenly you find yourself with hundreds of photos on your hard drive, as well as printed out all over your desk, room, and walls. What should you do to organize and catalogue your photos? Here are some tips to help you clean up the clutter, and enjoy your digital memories.
Contents
Steps
- Download a free image organizer. Fast small ones include Use XnView with Your Digital Images (open source) and Use IrfanView (popular). Picasa from Google is an easy-to-use photo management tool. However, read the fine print on the agreement you sign with Picasa/Google. It gives Google the rights to all of the photos you put on the site, for their unrestricted use.
- When you transfer your photos from your camera to your computer, immediately put them into a folder on your hard drive -- not just My Pictures, but create a subfolder by date (use reverse date format e.g. 2007-06-26 which is listed better by computers ordering files by name), event name or both. After the date you could give your shoot a name
- If you already have copious numbers of photos dumped into your My Pictures folder, take some time to create sub-folders as described above, and sort them into the appropriate folder.
- Regularly back up your photos by burning them onto a CD or DVD. Nothing is worse than having a hard drive crash and losing all of your pictures. Then, put your CD or DVD into a box, holder, or album (you can find 'photo albums' for picture CDs in photography shops) so you know where it is and have easy access. You can also use Online file backup services like Dropbox, Sugarsync or SkyDrive or use a dedicated Photo Share site that offers file synchronization like InmyPhotofolder.
- Log your best shots. Open all your images from a shoot. On a mac you can do this in preview. Scroll through these images and jot down your favourite shots. By doing this you can reduce 200 images down to 20.
- Import these images into a library. On a mac you could import them into iPhoto.
- As soon as the ink is dry, organize your photos into albums. The sooner you do this, the fewer photos you will have piling up and cluttering your space, not to mention getting damaged.
- Do the above step for all of the photos you already have printed out. Use different albums to catalogue and categorize -- for example, you can keep separate albums for friends, events you attend, and 'artful' shots that you take.
- Remember that if you back up your photos onto a CD, and leave them on the computer as well, you will eventually find you have multiple copies of the same photo in different folders. In Picasa2, when you back up pictures, Picasa will remember not to double up on the same CD.
- One good method of organizing is to put only photos about a particular subject on each CD and label it as such, such as "grandkids" or "reunion 98" then if you want a particular subject you can find it easily because you don't have "sewing projects" on the same CD as "Reunions"
Tips
- Download your photos off your camera as soon as possible after taking pictures. Neglecting to do so can lead to the nasty realization that your memory card is full at a bad time (like your kid's birthday party or your friend's graduation).
- If you use your images for a website, make sure to save the higher resolution original somewhere. This is because images saved for websites have a much lower resolution and look really terrible printed out.
- Printed photos can also be stored in boxes. Some stores sell special "memory boxes" that are decorative.
- Back up your digital photos regularly.
- Don't just backup your photos, try to back them up to the newest media every other year, (i.e. 2 years ago CDs were a popular back-up media, DVDs are popular now, 2 years from now, you can bet it will be something different). The idea is to ensure that the media you save to is always compatible with "tomorrow's" standard should you need to restore your images.
- Import images, make a backup copy then format card in camera.
Warnings
- Make sure the photo albums you choose are acid-free. Photos last longer in acid-free albums.
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What links here
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