Merge Photo Libraries Mac Os X

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Merge Photo Libraries Mac Os X Rating: 3,7/5 9914 reviews
  1. Merge Photo Libraries Mac Os X 10 7 Download Free
  2. Merge Two Photo Libraries Mac
  3. Merge Photo Libraries Mac Os X 10
  1. Nov 11, 2015 7 thoughts on “ How to quickly combine multiple Photos libraries in OS X ” Sylvain LE BOUCHER February 10, 2016 at 2:08 pm. Thanks a lot, finally a solution to merge my libraries quite easily. It just change the date of the video Do you have a solution to keep the date inchanged?
  2. Nov 01, 2017 I'd like to merge two macOS Photos libraries into one, with the ability to weed out duplicates during the process. I just sold an old Mac and moved its Photos library onto another Mac with its own existing Photos library.

Merge Photo Libraries Mac Os X 10 7 Download Free

As an OS X user you likely have at least some of your photos stored in Apple’s provided Photos application, and by doing so, you can use them with iCloud services, and in applications that interface with OS X’s media sharing services. However, there might be times where you want to keep some photos separate from others, and manage them in more private ways than having them accessible by other applications and services.

I am running 10.13.2 on my Mac mini. I have several photo libraries that I would like to merge while weeding out duplicates. And I would need the metadata to be transferred; ideally albums too. Nov 11, 2015  How to quickly combine multiple Photos libraries in OS X. Open Photos while holding the Option key. Select your desired Library to open. Select all items and export them to a folder. Quit and re-open Photos while holding the Option key. How do you find library on mac. Select a second library to open. Import all of the items into.

Creating a new library

Creating a new library for your various projects is relatively simple. First quit Photos, then launch it while holding the Option key, and you should see the library manager window appear. In here, you should see your current library listed, but also have the option to create a new library. Once created, you can then drag and drop or otherwise import the photos you want, and this new library will be the default one used when Photos launches.

By creating multiple libraries in this manner, you can keep projects separate and also spread out where you have your photos stored your library’s location, including storing it on a secondary partition, an external drive, or on a network attached storage (NAS) device.

Switching libraries

With multiple libraries on your Mac, you can switch between them very easily using two methods. The first is using the same library manager, so simply quit and relaunch Photos with the Option key held, and you can then select your library. However, an even easier approach is to simply open any of your photo libraries directly in the Finder, and it will open in Photos and become the default library used. With this approach, simply place the libraries or aliases to them in a convenient location, and then open them directly, instead of opening the Photos application itself.

The library chooser gives you a list of libraries that are in default locations on your Mac. You can use this panel to create new libraries, or choose those in non-standard locations like network storage drives.

Merge Two Photo Libraries Mac

The real issue with multiple libraries is not which library is the default opened with Photos, but which is used as your System Library, that is, the one that third-party services like iCloud and other applications will reference when they are instructed to access your photo library. To change this, you need to go to the Photos preferences and click the button to use the current library as the System Library.

Merge Photo Libraries Mac Os X 10

The caveat here is that in order to use a library with iCloud and other services, it must be stored on a volume that is formatted to Apple’s native HFS+ (Mac OS Extended) format. You can check this on any locally-attached drive by selecting it in the Finder and pressing Command-i to reveal the information window. Then expand the General section, where you should see its format listed.

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