What is best way to organise photos

G

Guest

I have a heap of photos on my computer and would like to hear from people as to how they organise theirs into folders etc. I sometimes use the date they were taken in a folder eg 040520 (which is todays date backwards) and then put these folders into months and these folders into years. I also started putting them into folders of the people that they are taken of but this could get confusing with multiple people in one photo
Is there a better way of doing it? I would like to be able to not only find a photo by searching when taken but also by comments such as who is in it. Should I just add these comments to the comments tab on properties and if so where can I search the comments from
Any advice would be appreciated.
 
G

Guest

Don't know if this will be of any help, I raise mini horses. I take a lot of pictures of the individual horses. Name a folder for that horse, store them in that folder. At shows when I take pictures I name a folder for that show and store those pics accordingly. HT

----- Mick J wrote: ----

I have a heap of photos on my computer and would like to hear from people as to how they organise theirs into folders etc. I sometimes use the date they were taken in a folder eg 040520 (which is todays date backwards) and then put these folders into months and these folders into years. I also started putting them into folders of the people that they are taken of but this could get confusing with multiple people in one photo
Is there a better way of doing it? I would like to be able to not only find a photo by searching when taken but also by comments such as who is in it. Should I just add these comments to the comments tab on properties and if so where can I search the comments from
Any advice would be appreciated.
 
G

Guest

There is a program called Adobe Photoshop Album 2.0 which allows you to store your photo's by the date or by when the picture was taken, or you can tag the pictures such as "animals" or "family" etc....and look them up that way....This software also allows you to create slideshows with background music, transitions, and effects....If you go the Adobe.com you can order the software for $39.00 until the end of May, 2004. A great deal if you ask me....Hope this helps....
 
J

John Inzer

leelee said:
There is a program called Adobe Photoshop Album 2.0 which
allows you to store your photo's by the date or by when
the picture was taken, or you can tag the pictures such
as "animals" or "family" etc....and look them up that
way....This software also allows you to create slideshows
with background music, transitions, and effects....If you
go the Adobe.com you can order the software for $39.00
until the end of May, 2004. A great deal if you ask
me....Hope this helps....
========================================
Actually, there's even a free version:

Adobe Photoshop Album 2.0
Starter Edition free download
http://tinyurl.com/pw5v


--

John Inzer
Picture It! MVP
return e-mail disabled

Picture It! Support Center
http://tinyurl.com/2po2o

Digital Image Support Center
http://tinyurl.com/3xxqg
 
W

windsurferLA

I too have photo filing problems. I would buy Photoshop Album 2.0, but
it supposedly does not work on computers running Win98SE. Does
Photoshop Album 1.0 work with Win98SE, assuming I can find a used copy?

There is Picasa 1.5.1, but supposedly the tags it generates are not
saved with the images. Also reportedly, "Picasa can read some EXIF
metadata (the standard used by digital cameras), but has no facility to
edit or add to the picture metadata. "

Is Photoshop Album 2.0 so superior to Picasa that is pays for me to
transition my photo editing from my conveniently located (home) Win98SE
machine to my not-so-conveniently located (office) WinXP-pro machine?

windsurfer in LA
 
G

Guest

I am with you on this one.
I want to say away from any proprietary format and hopefully be able to
search for the file using just the OS. Here is what I have done so far and
what works.

1) it is far too much trouble to rename all the files, so they just have the
numbering that the camera assigns.
2) I put the pictures in directories by ‘event’ with at date – that works
best for me. Usually is name them 2004 08 beach pictures, or 2004 07 trip to
the farm. Year and month – that way they sort well.

Now here is where is becomes tricky and I don’t have a good answer. I want
to be able to find all the pictures where I am sitting on the beach smiling.
So, I need to add this information to the file somewhere.

There are 2 options for this that seem reasonable to me and allow me to
share the images.
1) use the JPG properties (right click on the image, choose properties and
go to summary). Anything in here seems to be searchable from the OS – at
least the windows OS. Macs don’t seem to get this info when I copy it over.
2) use EXIF information – that is all the stuff that the camera stores on
the image when the picture is taken, this transfers over to the MAC, but
doesn’t seem to be searchable from the OS.

So – after that long rambling – any thoughts?
 
B

BEK

people as to how they organise theirs into folders etc. I sometimes use the
date they were taken in a folder eg 040520 (which is todays date backwards)
and then put these folders into months and these folders into years. I also
started putting them into folders of the people that they are taken of but
this could get confusing with multiple people in one photo.find a photo by searching when taken but also by comments such as who is in
it. Should I just add these comments to the comments tab on properties and
if so where can I search the comments from?

I use Adobe Photoshop Album for all my photo cataloging, viewing,
categorizing and emailing needs. It has so many other features that going
to the their website and reading about the program would be the most
efficient way to evaluate it. You can download a trial version for free.

http://www.adobe.com/products/photoshopalbum/starter.html

BEK
 
Y

Yves Alarie

Well, this is the way I do it. Pretty easy to do and then get back to the
pictures I want.

If you need to batch rename and number, you can do this easily with XP.



Make a new folder on your hard drive.

Name it something easy to remember and search for: year, month, event
separated by underline. For example:

2004_09_Summer Vacations

Copy the photos you want to place in a particular order into this new
folder. You can copy photos to this new folder from any photo folder you
have to make a new collection.

Once the photos are copied in this new folder, open the new folder. Hold the
Ctrl key down and press the letter A. This will select (highlight in blue)
all the files in the folder.

Right click on the first file (important to right click on the first file
because renaming will start from there).

Click on Rename on the opening menu.

Type in the name you want, to replace the current name. Any system will
work, such as year, month, day, event. For example type in:

2003_09_02 Virginia Beach Vacation (1).jpg

and press Enter.

XP will automatically rename all the files (1), (2), (3), etc. and they will
open in the order (1), (2), (3), etc. If you copy them to a CD, this order
will be maintained.



Two important things when renaming using the above method.

1. Look at the name of the above file, you must include a space between the
last character of the file name and (1)

2. When you rename, don't forget to add .jpg after (1). If you forget, XP
will warn you, so enter .jpg after this warning. If you don't, you will not
be able to open the file. If you still do not enter .jpg after the warning,
don't worry. Rename again and enter .jpg



You can rename any time and as many times as you want. You are not dependent
on the camera wizard to rename.

You can rename groups of files in a folder, just select the group you want
and right click on the first one in the group and rename from there.



You can do even better than this. Suppose you want a slide show and you want
the last three pictures taken to be the first three or in between some other
photos, or re-order the photos in any way. Easy to do. Open the folder in
thumbnail view, use your mouse to place the thumbnails in the order you
want. Select all the photos and rename. The (1), (2), (3), etc will be added
in the order you placed the thumbnails. They will stay in this order if you
copy to a CD because XP lists (or sorts) by file name only on a CD.



If you have many pictures in this new folder and all you want is to order
them in chronological order, moving thumbnails in the correct order is
tedious. Let XP do this for you. Change the View from Thumbnails to Details.
In the Details view, right click on the column header "Name". This will open
a list. Click on More at the bottom of the list. A list will open, check the
box "Date Picture Taken". This will add the column Date Picture Taken in
the Details view. Then you click on the column header "Date Picture taken"
and XP will now change the list of files from the name of the files (the
default) to listing files in chronological order. Now, change the View to
Thumbnails and they are in chronological order. Select them, rename them
using the above procedure and you are in business.



Convenient if you want to make a slide show of pictures from different
folders. Just make a new folder, copy the photos you want in the new folder,
place the thumbnails in the order you want and rename.

You are not restricted to only one name (you use one name for one group of
picture, another for the next group, etc.) and you can control the order in
which each group will open, by placing a number up front of the file name
for each group. You may have photos of Christmas, Easter, New Year etc. and
of different years. Once you have the thumbnails in the order you want,
select the first group, right click on the first thumbnail in the group and
rename:

1_2002 Easter (1).jpg

Then select the second group and rename

2_2002 Christmas (1).jpg

Placing 1_, 2_, etc in front will control the order of each group and (1)
controls the order within each group.

If you want to add another group later and you want the photos of this group
to be, say between 1_ and 2_, use 1a_ in front of the file name.

You may also want to add some more photos in a particular group at a later
time, say your Christmas group. No problem. Copy the files you want to add
in the folder, move the thumbnails in the group you want to add them to
where you want them. Select all the thumbnails in the group, right click on
the first one and rename. When you rename, you must change the name in order
for rename to take place. Add something like XYZ after Christmas. Once
renaming is done, select the same files again and rename again. Remove the
XYZ and you will be back to the original name.



Note: There is a disadvantage to changing the original name of files. This
is why I recommend at the start to make a new folder and copy your original
files in the new folder before renaming. The disadvantage is this. Many have
the option of video out from the camera to display the pictures from the
memory card to a TV for a slide show. If you change the file names and copy
the files back to your memory card to display on your TV (or even to just
look at them on the LCD of the camera) your camera will not be able to read
the files. You can always rename, using the same format (8 characters) that
your camera uses, but now you have to rename each file. So, be careful what
you do with your original files.



Note: Although I recommend making a new folder and copying your files there
before renaming, there is also another way to do this and you may prefer
this once you are comfortable with renaming. Here is how to do it.

Open the folder to see your files. Hold the Ctrl key down and press the
letter A to select (highlight in blue) all the files. Hold the Ctrl key down
and press the letter C. This makes a copy of all the files to your
clipboard. Hold the Ctrl key down and press the letter V. This copies
(pastes) all the files back in your folder. The file names will be the same,
but the words "Copy of" will be in front of the file names. You then rename
Copy of files.

This way your original files and renamed files are in the same folder.

This is also very useful when you want to edit a photo with software. You
always edit "Copy of", never edit your original file.



You can also use the free Irfanview software to batch rename, available
here: http://www.irfanview.com/

Another for free is Visere available here:

http://www.dmmd.net/products/products.htm



Or many others if you search via google. They all have their quirks.



A final note, if your head is not spinning by now.

When you use the above batch renaming system on XP, everything will work as
long as you are on XP. This means your XP hard drive, copy to CD etc.
However if you go out of XP you will encounter some problem. For example,
you made a photo CD on XP using the above system and you now play this CD in
your DVD. Your DVD player will not play the files in the same order. You
made the files:

Image (1).jpg

Image (2).jpg

Image (10).jpg

Image (20).jpg

They will be displayed in this order on XP but your DVD player will display
them this way:

Image (1).jpg

Image (10).jpg

Image (2).jpg

Image (20).jpg

If you want to upload these files to a Web site, some server will refuse
files with ( ) in the file name while others will accept them but will
display them the same way as your DVD player will as shown above.



So, what are you supposed to do with this conflict between XP and everything
else.

This is what I do.

1. Rename with XP with the system given above.

2. If I want to copy to a CD to play to a DVD or upload to a Web site, I
then use Irfanview. With Irfanview I rename my XP files using the default in
Irfanview:

001.image

002.image

etc.

Since Irfanview does not actually rename your original XP file names, it
only adds new file names in the same folder, I now have two sets of names
for the same files. I simply copy the Irfanview set of file names to a CD to
play on a DVD or to upload to a Web site and once done just delete them.



I know your head may be spinning about all this renaming but you can really
manipulate things very well by just sitting down and understanding the
system. With a little practice you can get what you want.

However, before renaming, make sure you make a new folder and copy some
photo files there so you can practice with no danger to your original files.



adam said:
I am with you on this one.
I want to say away from any proprietary format and hopefully be able to
search for the file using just the OS. Here is what I have done so far and
what works.

1) it is far too much trouble to rename all the files, so they just have the
numbering that the camera assigns.
2) I put the pictures in directories by 'event' with at date - that works
best for me. Usually is name them 2004 08 beach pictures, or 2004 07 trip to
the farm. Year and month - that way they sort well.

Now here is where is becomes tricky and I don't have a good answer. I want
to be able to find all the pictures where I am sitting on the beach smiling.
So, I need to add this information to the file somewhere.

There are 2 options for this that seem reasonable to me and allow me to
share the images.
1) use the JPG properties (right click on the image, choose properties and
go to summary). Anything in here seems to be searchable from the OS - at
least the windows OS. Macs don't seem to get this info when I copy it over.
2) use EXIF information - that is all the stuff that the camera stores on
the image when the picture is taken, this transfers over to the MAC, but
doesn't seem to be searchable from the OS.

So - after that long rambling - any thoughts?
people as to how they organise theirs into folders etc. I sometimes use the
date they were taken in a folder eg 040520 (which is todays date backwards)
and then put these folders into months and these folders into years. I also
started putting them into folders of the people that they are taken of but
this could get confusing with multiple people in one photo.find a photo by searching when taken but also by comments such as who is in
it. Should I just add these comments to the comments tab on properties and
if so where can I search the comments from?
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top