Friday, February 26, 2010

The Great Migration

Apple announced Aperture 3 just over two weeks ago. Unfortunately, even though a trial version is offered for download, I had to wait for it to be delivered snail-mail because I needed a licensed copy to upgrade my existing library. Why I still need a physical disk to install software in 2010 is beyond me.

As I wrote previously, I had intended to keep my iPhoto and Aperture libraries separate, leaving all of my pre-SLR photos in the former. I hit a snag with that strategy. One of the nice advantages of Apple product hegemony is that everything plays very nicely together. I can sync my entire photo library to my iPhone and to my Apple TV. In fact, the photo screen saver on Apple TV is its most understated feature. Whenever we have people over I turn on some music and random pictures float across the screen.

Unfortunately you have to choose either iPhoto or Aperture when you sync, so I had to move everything into one library, and that took a lot of work.

Aperture does offer a one step full import of your iPhoto library which carries over all of you metadata including Faces and Places, so that part was easy. Once I got it there, I went through each Event (in Aperture Events translate into Projects) to clean it up.

Did I have to clean up all of these legacy projects? Of course not, but I had my Aperture library in pristine shape, and I wanted to keep it that way.

First of all I wanted to clean up the keywords. I used to tag all of my photos with the names of who was in them, but that seems redundant with facial recognition, so I removed those. I added other keywords for activity, location, holidays, and other categories. I also tag photos that were taken by other photographers to make sure I give them credit ("By Kirsten", "By Leslie", etc). Before I had an SLR I relied heavily on others with better equipment and a better understanding of photography for good shots.

I also re-rated most of the pictures. I now have a stricter scale and am stingier with five star ratings. As of this writing I have only rated seven of my own shots rated this highly. Also, my standard ho-hum rating used to be three stars, now it's two.

Finally I cropped most of them. Now that I understand a little about photography I know how important it is for a picture to have a clear subject without much else. Ideally I try to take tight shots in the camera, but cropping can accomplish the same thing. It's better to have a low resolution clean shot than a high resolution cluttered one.

There are over 3,000 pictures in my library (not including all of the ones I've thrown away). After more hours than I care to admit, I've finally got a tightly organized library. Becky thinks I'm crazy but I can't help myself, I'm a perfectionist.

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