Introduction
Put yourself in this scenario, you have just received an e-mail about one of your online photos, the sender would like a hi-res copy for print (be it a competition entry/client/magazine/whatever), this is great news, but where did you put the original media??? If you’ve been taking a lot of photos for a while you could be wading through an awful lot of files or film to find one image, and that’s time that you either don’t have or could better spend on something else.
This is where Digital Asset Management (DAM) comes into its own. In this post I will describe the methods I use to store and catalogue my photographs in order that I can quickly locate the original media for any print or digital file. These methods add a very small initial overhead to storing your photos, but deliver an easily searched and cleverly indexed image catalogue.
For my purposes I use some software called Iview MediaPro, but Adobe Bridge, Lightroom, or any other photographic/media cataloguing software will work just as well. In order to use this method successfully you will need to have some of this software installed on your computer.
Organising your files
Cataloguing
What Now?
Conclusion
You now know how to effectively keep track of your photographs, so get to it, the sooner you start the better. If you have a backlog of photos to be catalogued it will be daunting, but you may find some gems you’d previously overlooked or forgotten about. Have peace of mind that you will always be able to find your original media.
Always interesting to see how others do it. I myself, use Aperture and have done since the initial beta phase. The benefit of using Aperture is the library and management system, which is pretty damn impressive when it comes to finding, cataloging and ensuring images are all kept in place.
Other benefit is that you can add a backup disk to Aperture and use that as a dump, so once all files have been imported and sorted/rated/stacked etc, i backup to my 1tb disk and then do a system-wide backup.
Anal, but required
Comment by Daniel — January 10, 2009 @ 7:16 am
I am jammy indeed, the 5D2 looks to be an awesome camera…
Really enjoying your blog and this archiving method seems very decent – how do you cope when your catalog starts to get really big? Do you export to an external drive or DVD and then have that as a catalog as a saved reference (i.e. if you re-insert it you can continue editing the RAW files or what have you)
P.s. if you are ever down in London or even further Brighton would be good to grab a pint
Comment by Jamie — January 27, 2009 @ 4:29 pm
I keep buying bigger hard disks
And I delete a lot of stuff that’s crap.
The software I use has a backup option where you can spit out an entire catlogue or any sub section to removable media (or an empty HDD) and it will also create a new catalogue on there which contains just the backup set – it’s really rather cool.
Glad you like the photos, been following yours via Ben Roberts for a while now.
Ben
Comment by BennehBoy — January 27, 2009 @ 10:41 pm