I’ve been taking pictures since I was a teenager now my kids have grown up an I have over 90k pics.
I’m also digitizing Slides, 8mm film, printed pic etc.
Any ideas on software , techniques, steps, cool ideas to organize this and maybe put them to some use ?
Thank you 🙏
Hi! I’m going through the same process right now. Not quite 90k, but I’m cataloging about 25k photos that I took between the ages of 12 and 36. My process has been roughly thus:
- Organize photos by year in individual folders for each year. This was a manual process that took forever. No way around it!
- Organize by season within each annual folder - Winter, Spring, Summer Fall.
- Use OSX batch rename function to rename all files according to year and season.
- Use Lightroom to resize everything to 4x6 inches at 300 DPI. The early digital photos are way too low-res to be usable and the newer digital photos are unnecessarily high-res. Resizing everything this way makes them print-ready and at a size that makes them practical to post or share right away.
- Use Photoshop + Dehancer to add light film emulation using the Image Processor function. Added Gaussian blur to older, low-res photos to mask digital artifacts. Those photos are blurry, but with heavier film emulation they could pass as super grainy 110 film shots or something.
- From there I tagged the photos that I thought were the best within a given year. I was left with between 400-700 photos per year that I thought were better than others.
Good ideas thank you. Good luck with the project
The DAM Book by Peter Krogh is good
To get an overview of all your images, if you are on Windows, you can use the free app Tinta.
You can browse all 90,000 images in one window.
Oh wow. Thank you 🙏
Certainly. Reviews are appreciated.
I’ll share my findings and selection as well as progress with the community
Great! Looking forward to it.
Simple folder structure by date taken: /yyyy/yyyy-mm-dd/originalFilename.ext
E.g Photo_Archive/2014/2014-12-24/DSC003_2769.NEF
I put all contextual information in the keywords or exif/IPTc metadata.
I like this format because I can easily drill down to a desired image if I know when it was taken, and it makes it easier to parse and traverse the tree if I have to script a tool to do something.
Having said that, it’s a hell of a lot easier when they’re digital photos and not scanned. When I’m scanning batches of slides I number the boxes, then use the dates on the slides and similar format: /35mm_scans/yyyy/box#/IMG_yyyy-mm_nn.tif Where filename is the year/month on the slide, and nn is the slide number.
Good ideas. The scanning is time consuming even though I bought a high speed scanner. But it’s cataloguing is easier since I can on the fly create folders for the event year etc.