How can I "Put Back" a time machine backup from the trash to my external hard drive?

Basically what happened was I accidentally put an older time machine backup from my external hard drive into the trash on my macbook. Since then, time machine has made new backups onto my external hard drive. How can I either "Put Back" or replace the deleted backup back into my hard drive?
Whenever I try to move it it says "A newer item named “Backups.backupdb” already exists in this location. Do you want to replace it with the older one you’re moving?" I click replace and after a few minutes of loading, it says "Cannot replace. An item named "" already exists."

As long as you don't delete the trash, the files should be recoverable.
I suspect using the Put Back command could take a long time, so be patient.
If your Time Machine backups are mixed with your daughter's backups you might want to buy a larger drive and move the Time Machine files to the new drive.
Regarding missing photos in iPhoto...There might be options to rebuild/recover that data from iPhoto rather than trying to revert to a Time Machine backup.
Check out this third party app, iPhoto Library Manager. It has a demo.
http://www.fatcatsoftware.com/iplm/
Options for a larger drive.
I like the Seagate USB 3.0 Backup plus drives. Works on USB 2.0 ports. They come formatted for PC but easy to format in Disk Utility.
I don't recommend Western Digital because of the boot problem with some of their drives.
LaCie makes good drives.
All Mac formatted drives will cost more and it’s easy to reformat with Disk Utility. Do not use the software that comes with the drives. It’s recommended that you use Apple’s Disk Utility.
Prices vary but this gives you an idea of what you’ll find. As you notice the second and third TB is usually only $15 more per TB. Normally, you’ll find these prices but right now the 1T is more than the 2T
Seagate Backup Plus 1 TB USB 3.0 $85
Seagate Backup Plus 2 TB USB 3.0 $99
Seagate Backup Plus 3 TB USB 3.0 $115
I have seen the 3T on sale for $99.
Locally, Best Buy seems to have the best prices.

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    jpdemers wrote:
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    The Digital Editions forum is here, in case this is what you are talking about:
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    I hope someone can help me... I have spent hours and hours reading forums but none that have addressed my problem.
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    I suspect using the Put Back command could take a long time, so be patient.
    If your Time Machine backups are mixed with your daughter's backups you might want to buy a larger drive and move the Time Machine files to the new drive.
    Regarding missing photos in iPhoto...There might be options to rebuild/recover that data from iPhoto rather than trying to revert to a Time Machine backup.
    Check out this third party app, iPhoto Library Manager. It has a demo.
    http://www.fatcatsoftware.com/iplm/
    Options for a larger drive.
    I like the Seagate USB 3.0 Backup plus drives. Works on USB 2.0 ports. They come formatted for PC but easy to format in Disk Utility.
    I don't recommend Western Digital because of the boot problem with some of their drives.
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    All Mac formatted drives will cost more and it’s easy to reformat with Disk Utility. Do not use the software that comes with the drives. It’s recommended that you use Apple’s Disk Utility.
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    Seagate Backup Plus 1 TB USB 3.0 $85
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    Seagate Backup Plus 3 TB USB 3.0 $115
    I have seen the 3T on sale for $99.
    Locally, Best Buy seems to have the best prices.

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    Hi - I would really appreciate it if someone could help me find out if my Time Machine backps are actually encrypted.
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    a_quinn wrote:
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    You could archive the TC's contents to a USB drive connected to it, per #Q6 in Using Time Machine with a Time Capsule). 
    Then delete the original, start a backup with encryption, and as soon as the encrypted sparse bundle is created, cancel the backup.
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    Connect the USB drive to your Mac, mount that sparse bundle, open its disk image, and copy the Backups.backupdb folder to the one on the TC.
    Depending on how large the sparse bundle is, that could easily take a couple of days, at least, even connected via Ethernet.
    Just for testing one day, I encrypted a very small set of existing test backups on a F/W 800 drive - 6 dated backups using a whole 12 GB.  Took an hour.
    An alternative would be, just do the "archive" and keep the USB drive "on the shelf" for a while.  You can always connect it to your Mac and access those backups via the Browse Other Backup Disks option. 
    Trying to keep a couple of years worth of backups usually isn't a good idea.  It's a very complex structure, so the odds of damage increase, it takes much longer to populate the TM browser, and it works slower and slower, and if you didn't need something for 6 months, are you really going to need it in 2 years?

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    I would like to have two separate external hard drive Time Machine backups of the same computer.  One to keep at home and one to take to work as a safety net.  Is this possible in Lion?  And if so, how do I do it?
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    Hey mrssqueegy,
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    Take a look on this page at item #17:
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  • Put back deleted time machine backup files

    I Accidentally deleted my time machine backups folder although I can still see all my files in the trash of the specific external hard drive. But when I choose put back I get a message saying the files can't be moved because they are backup files.
    Is there anyway to go around this?
    it seems I just need the right permissions to drag the folder back to its original place.
    thank you

    I'm up for anything! Those are my only backups and on top of that I can't boot my own computer properly (only through an external HD which has bad sectors) because it gets stuck on Yosemite installation reboot. So I'm trying to get my time machine files back so I can go into recovery mode and see if I can put my yosemite system onto the new internal HD.
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    total 600
    drwxrwxr-x  17 domingosmiguel  staff     646 12 Dez 19:07 .
    drwxrwxrwt@  8 root            admin     272 18 Dez 09:48 ..
    -r--------   1 domingosmiguel  staff      16  6 Mai  2011 .00254bd50940
    -rw-rw-r--@  1 domingosmiguel  staff    6148 15 Dez 11:21 .DS_Store
    drwx------   5 domingosmiguel  staff     170 15 Out  2011 .Spotlight-V100
    drwxrwxrwt@  3 domingosmiguel  staff     102 13 Jun  2013 .TemporaryItems
    drwx-wx-wx@  3 domingosmiguel  staff     102 12 Dez 18:40 .Trashes
    -rw-r--r--   1 root            wheel  162570 25 Ago  2011 .VolumeIcon.icns
    -rw-r--r--@  1 domingosmiguel  staff     312 13 Jun  2013 .apdisk
    -rw-r--r--   1 domingosmiguel  staff       0  6 Mai  2011 .com.apple.timemachine.supported
    -rw-r--r--   1 root            staff     785 25 Nov  2013 .disk_label
    -rw-r--r--   1 root            staff    3149 25 Nov  2013 .disk_label_2x
    drwx------  27 domingosmiguel  staff     918 15 Dez 12:39 .fseventsd
    drwxr-xr-x+  6 root            staff     204 14 Dez 16:43 Backups.backupdb
    -rwxr-xr-x@  1 root            wheel  115716 29 Set  2013 tmbootpicker.efi
    I thank you again for the help

  • Time Capsule: How can one limit size of Time Machine Backup?

    So there appears to be no easy way of partitioning the hard drive in Time Capsule. If this is so how does one limit the size of the Time Machine backups folders?
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    Thanks BSP. Yes I am aware of the ability to limit the folders that TM backs up. I use this capability, But that certainly is not the solution I want.
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    I have connected a hard drive to my airport extreme.
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    Both are possible. However, Apple does NOT support Time Machine backups to AirPort Disks attached to the 802.11n AirPort Extreme Base Station (AEBSn). Doing so will potentially lead to data corruption and is highly not recommended. Please check out this excellent Pondini article for more details. This article also provides the Apple Support references that states Apple's position. Bottom line? If your backups are critical to you, then you may want to rethink your backup solution.
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    In the Description box, type a descriptive name like "AirPort Disk File Sharing," and then, click Done.
    Click on Update.
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    Enter the Pubic (WAN-side) IP address of the AEBSn, followed by a colon and the Public port number that you choose in step 11 of the previous procedure. For example: afp://www.mydyndnsdomain.com:8888 or afp://123.456.789.123:8888
    Click Connect.
    You should be prompted for your user name and password. The user name can be anything you like; the password should be the Disk password for the AEBSn that you created in step 6 previously.
    Click Connect.

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