Aperture library consolidation - newbie question

I am pretty new to Aperture. Previously I have been using iPhoto for a long time, so I have quite a big iPhoto library on my internal HDD, most of them with adjustments etc.
When I installed Aperture a few months ago I imported the iPhoto library without copying the files physically. It means all the "old" photos are still in the iPhoto library and only referenced to in the Aperture library.
After Aperture installation I do everything differently - I import photos into the Aperture library leaving the originals on a external FW HDD. So I have in the Aperture library now some photos referencing to my internal HDD iPhoto originals and some photos referencing to my external HDD.
I still use iPhoto but only for slideshows and managing of older online galleries, I published in the past from iPhoto.
My question: what is the best way to get some order into it and have everything in one place?
My plan is:
- first consolidate masters from the iPhoto library into Aperture library with the Copy option checked to bring all referenced masters into the Aperture library
- then relocate masters from the Aperture library to the external HDD with the Move option checked
- clean my iPhoto library from within iPhoto
Is the result of these steps what I am expecting to get? Is there a better way? Am I doing anything wrong?
Thanks for suggestions.
Tonden

You plan seams to be alright.
1) Consolidate (copy) masters into Aperture library.
2) Relocate masters to external harddisk.
You are writing that you "imported your iPhoto library" into Aperture by reference, and here is my question. Did you import both the original (masters) AND adjusted images (versions) into Aperture?
If you want to use Aperture for all your image adjustment then you should consider to delete all the versions you imported into Aperture (they are now masters in Aperture) and then make adjustments to all the masters you imported from iPhoto.
All the original masters files you have imported from iPhoto all have the keyword "Original from iPhoto", so they are easy to find.
Karsten

Similar Messages

  • Aperture newbie - library / file folder question

    I am still trying to figure out the best way to use aperture to organize my work and even after reading the documents, I'm confused about why it stores things the way it is and what other options would be of benefit.
    With iPhoto, everything was stored in the iPhoto library. With they way Aperture is set up, I still have an Aperture library "file" that is 6.x gig but all my files are being stored in the pictures folder under their own folder names. I was under the impression all pictures were stored in the library file like iPhoto did. I'm assuming I just have something set differently.
    So if that is the case and I can store all my images in the Aperture folder, what is the advantage of doing that versus they way its storing all of them now? Is one way better than another? Any opinions?
    Thanks.
    Matt

    On a laptop or on an iMac you probably do want to manage by Referencing image Masters. Hard drives slow as they fill, so at some point - perhaps immediately - you will want your Masters on one or more external Firewire 800 hard drives. OWC <http://www.owcomputing.com/> has good Firewire 800 solutions.
    With Referenced Masters, simply Finder-copy each new batch of images to the external hard drive and eject the camera card. Then (after backup of images) from within Aperture Import the images by Reference (when you go to import, on the right hand side of the import window select "Store files in their current location").
    Existing images on your hard drive can similarly be imported selecting "Store files in their current location" however personally I would move the originals to an external drive prior to importing into Aperture because trying to keep originals on the single iMac or laptop internal drive will sooner or later overfill the drive.
    During the import process is also a good time to assign all manner of keywords, so take some time in advance thinking about keywording.
    A good rule of thumb is not to fill any drive more than 70%, and for best speed keep important drives no more than 50% full.
    Good luck!
    -Allen Wicks

  • Aperture - library management and external HDD question

    Hi all. 
    I have just graduated from a point and shoot to a Panasonic GH2 (love it), and have now begun using Aperture 3 rather than iPhoto on my early 2008 MB Pro to manage my photos going forwards.  Of course, I’ve now discovered that Aperture is quite the resource hog and so it’s upgrade time (darn, “have” to buy a new ‘puter!).  I have a 2011 MB Pro (2.3Ghz i7 with 512GB SSD) on order and 8GB of DDR 3 arriving from Crucial.  Since I have this brand-new-computer opportunity I want to make sure I’m organising things properly before I start transferring things across, and so have a few Aperture-related questions.  (In case it’s relevant, I’m shooting in RAW+JPEG.  So far I’ve been using RAW as master, but have since learnt it might be a good idea to import JPG as master and switch to RAW only when I need to make corrections, so I’ll probably do that going forwards.)
    I understand that moving to referenced masters on an external drive might be a good idea and save me precious SSD-space.  To that end, questions are:
    1. Can anyone recommend a companion external HDD for Aperture and the 2011 MBPro?  I guess either FW800 or Thunderbolt are the way to go.  The Lacie Little Big Disk Thunderbolt might be an option but is this overkill for Aperture masters or would FW800 be sufficient.  I’ve also seen the G-Tech G-RAID mini, Lacie Rugged – thoughts welcome.
    Key requirements are a) as compact as possible, and b) bus powered.
    2. What kind of performance can I expect if I go down this route?  Is there going to be significant loading/processing delay whenever I switch to a new image?
    3. How will Aperture cope with (eg) syncing photos to iPad / iPhone if the drive containing the masters isn’t connected?  Put another way, are JPG renders saved in the Aperture library (i.e. on my MBP SSD) or with the masters?
    Thanks in advance to anyone who responds!
    Aljrob

    Aljrob_UK wrote:
     ...I have a 2011 MB Pro (2.3Ghz i7 with 512GB SSD) on order and 8GB of DDR 3 arriving
    ...I understand that moving to referenced masters on an external drive might be a good idea and save me precious SSD-space.
    1. Can anyone recommend a companion external HDD for Aperture and the 2011 MBPro?  I guess either FW800 or Thunderbolt are the way to go.
    ...Key requirements are a) as compact as possible, and b) bus powered.
    OWC (an excellent vendor) has the Elite Pro Mini hard drive that meets your specs:
    http://eshop.macsales.com/shop/firewire/EliteALmini/eSATA_FW800_FW400_USB
    Thiunderbolt drives are not mainstream yet but eSATA and FW800 both work well. The multiple connection methods of OWC drives allow very desirable flexibility when purposing/repurposing drives.
    Note too that the MBP optical drive can be replaced with up to a 1-TB hard drive DIY or OWC will do it for you. That is what I am doing with my 17" 2011 MBP.
    2. Is there going to be significant loading/processing delay whenever I switch to a new image?
    SSD latency is orders of magnitude less than hard drives. Switching to a new image even fast hard drives with fast connectivity add significant latency delay. To avoid that what I do is leave (Referenced) Masters on the SSD until all editing is complete (which may be a few weeks). Only then do I use Aperture to change the Referenced Masters location from the SSD to a large external drive.
    What kind of performance can I expect if I go down this route?
    With Masters on the SSD and 8 GB RAM imports/exports are very fast and all Aperture editing is essentially instant. You will be pleased!
    Suggested workflow steps for Referenced Masters:
    • Use a FW card reader or MBP slot to copy to a file folder on the SSD (never directly into Aperture or any other images management app). With fast camera cards copy times are quick, but cheap slow cards can slow this step down a lot.
    • Eject and physically disconnect the card reader.
    • Back up that file folder on external drive(s).
    • Only after backup is complete, reformat the camera card in-camera.
    • Import images into Aperture from the file folder on the SSD.
    HTH
    -Allen Wicks

  • Master files consolidated into Aperture library and now lost...

    Aperture 3.1 appears to be doing strange things with a few of my master RAW files stored in the Aperture Library. I consolidated several files (as a copy) into the library and the files showed that they were non-referenced for several months but now I get the yellow triangle and "Referenced File" arrow on the file metadata.
    Any ideas Aperture folks?

    I havent found an easier way. It happened to me once, and i just deleted all of the songs out of iTunes, but not out of my hard drive. then i replaced them all in the library. It took like 12 hours cuz i have 15 GB worth, but at least i didnt have any more doubles

  • Aperture newbie question

    I just got my first Mac and decided to get started with Aperture (after being a long-time Lightroom user).
    I am trying to get used to the import functions - as compared to LR - in moving my files into the Aperture library.
    I have been using various cameras (primarily Olympus) where there is an option to shoot RAW+JPEG and I see in the import box there is an option whether or not to import both, and if importing both - which to have as the MASTER or to import as separate masters.
    My question is: once the images are imported, is there anyway to change this initial selction (I know if you import them together you can later change which is the master)"
    For example - if I had it set to import both and set the JPEG as master, can you separate them into two separate masters so they both show in the browser?
    Or the opposite - if you import them as separate masters, can you then "combine" them so that only one shows?
    In Lightroom this is called "stacking", but it seems that the only way to do this in Aperture (unless I am missing something which is completely likely) is by a series of photos that were taken sequentially.
    Thanks,
    Steve

    If you import both with one as Master (JPEG or RAW), you can use the context menu to create a new version from Master and then switch it to the other file type so you have side-by-side JPEG and RAW versions. This is done one at a time though (AFAIK - there is no batch process to split them after importing together).
    If you import them as separate Masters, you can manually stack them as you wish by selecting both and then using the Stack command in the menu or using 'Command + K' keys (AFAIK - there is not a batch process for this procedure either).
    Message was edited by: CorkyO2 to fix typo

  • Workflow Questions - Same Aperture Library on two machines - Sync ?

    Ok, So now that 1.1 is out I copied my Aperture library to my new MacBookPro, updated to v1.1, loaded the program ... and Bam, my library is there and working perfectly (after the Migrate process).
    So now, I have my libarary on my Desktop Dual Power PC machine at home and also on my MBP in the field ... I'm in heaven!
    My question is this. If I make a bunch of updates to the library (adding new images, new projects, new albums, rating new and existing images, assigning keywords, etc) on my MBP while sitting at Starbucks or laying on the beach is there any way to go home and sync these changes with the library on desktop machine?
    I realize that if I do all my work on the MBP in a new Project and then export that project I can then import it into the machine at home ... but that only solves 1/2 my problem ... how do I deal with projects and albums that already exist on both machines?
    Copying the entire Aperture Library back and forth is an option but at 40GB and growing that does not seem like a lot of fun.
    Any ideas? Even a 3rd party app would be cool if it worked. Would something like ChronoSync see inside the Aperture Library container and deal with changed items?
    Thanks,
    A happy v1.1 MBP user
    Power PC G5, Dual 2 Gz, 3.5 GB RAM   Mac OS X (10.4.3)   MacBookPro, 2.16GHz, 2 GB RAM

    <...>
    My question is this. If I make a bunch of updates to
    the library (adding new images, new projects, new
    albums, rating new and existing images, assigning
    keywords, etc) on my MBP while sitting at Starbucks
    or laying on the beach is there any way to go home
    and sync these changes with the library on desktop
    machine?
    I realize that if I do all my work on the MBP in a
    new Project and then export that project I can then
    import it into the machine at home ... but that only
    solves 1/2 my problem ... how do I deal with projects
    and albums that already exist on both machines?
    Copying the entire Aperture Library back and forth is
    an option but at 40GB and growing that does not seem
    like a lot of fun.
    Any ideas? Even a 3rd party app would be cool if it
    worked. Would something like ChronoSync see inside
    the Aperture Library container and deal with changed
    items?
    <...>
    Aha! That (file sync) is exactly the first thought I had when I read your post (though I personally was thinking RSyncX, Chrono Sync may be easier to use).
    To many programs the Aperture library looks just like a directory, which it really is - Finder and a few other things treat is specially but usually the origins of file synchronization tools are more UNIX utilities that just see the Aperture library and projects therein as a series of directories.
    In particular, what you'd be looking for this tool to update are:
    * Import directories in exisitng projects with new images and updated sidecar/XML files.
    * Added folders and albums
    * (most important) new copy of the Aperture database.
    All of these things are just files so it should be very easy for the sync utilitiy to find they are newer on the laptop and copy them over.
    Now what will not work well with this approach would be to edit files on the laptop and the desktop at the same time, and then attempt to syncronize them - but if you are only using one at a time you should not have issues.
    I would make a small sample library in both places to test this approach against but I see no reason why it should not work.
    The only other approach really would be shuttling projects back and forth between systems, which you may have to do someday if your desktop library exceeds the capacity of the laptop.

  • Newbie Question: Best Way to Set Up Library and Photos?

    Hello, all — I've been using Aperture for several years now, but I've been doing so with no structure or planning. Now I've got an Aperture library that is nearly 300G, mostly unorganized, and slow —  and I'm ready to clean things up. My general question: "What is the best way to organize Aperture Libraries/Photos?" Right now I've got one library and about 90% of the photos are stored "inside" Aperture.  I'd like to free up space on my internal hard drive and move my library (or libraries) and photos to an external drive.
    So my big questions are:
    "Should I have more than one library?"
    "Should I store my libraries on my internal or external drives?"
    "Should I store my pictures inside our outside of Apertur?" and
    "Starting with the library I already have, how should I go about making these changes?"
    I know these are all big topics and a lot to ask, but I'm feeling lost and would like at leat some pointers to get started.  I guess I should also point out I do limited editing of my pictures: the vast majority are downloaded from my phone and kept as-is in Aperture.
    THANKS!
    Mark

    So my big questions are:
    "Should I have more than one library?"
    That's up to you of course but there are pros and cons to multiple libraries.
    The biggest con is that by splitting up your library you cannot search all your images at one time. So say you split by year,  you can no longer get all images of Aunt Sally at Bobby's Birthday through the years. You would need to go into each year library, do the search and export the images.
    Also having multiple libraries can complicate housekeeping.
    On the plus side the libraries are smaller but there isn't a lot to be gained from smaller libraries. Aperture is able to handle fairly large libraries.
    "Should I store my libraries on my internal or external drives?"
    Again it's an individual choice but as a rule you want your libraries on the fastest drives you have. Up until the release of USB 3 and Thunderbolt that meant the internal drive, now you have more latitude.
    So old system I say keep it internal. Newer system, if you can afford the USB 3 or Thunderbolt drives it's your choice.
    "Should I store my pictures inside our outside of Apertur?" and
    Again it's a users choice. Keeping the originals managed (inside the library) greatly simplifies backups. You backup the library the originals are backed up also.  If the originals are referenced you need to make separate provisions for backing them up.
    A plus for having referenced originals is that you can store them on slower media and save space and money. Again before the new Macs this was more of as issue as you would want the library on the internal drive for speed but to save space you could put the originals on slower external drives.
    The other reason to store the originals referenced is if you need to access them with another application. If they are managed and in the library it really isn't feasible to access them from another application.
    "Starting with the library I already have, how should I go about making these changes?"
    Well step one is to make sure you have good working backups of everything. There is a good chance you will not get this right on the first shot and being able to just wipe everything out and start again will be both a big help and a great stress reliever.
    Other then that you need to decide how you what the final setup to look. You could make some teat libraries and try out different setups to see what feels better for how you work.  This will also let you play around with the commands and steps you will need to do when you do it for real.
    Good luck and if you take nothing else away from all this pay attention to the part about having backups before you start. You will be very happy you did.
    regards

  • Question about Aperture library size

    I am storing my photos on a secondary drive. However, my Aperture library is just as large as the original source folder even though I am not copying the images into the library.
    Shouldn't the library be smaller since it only references the images from another location?

    If you changed the size and quality of your preview settings, it's not enough to just "Update Previews". You will have to DELETE the old previews and generate new ones.
    (That's what my findings where)
    To my understanding, previews are used
    - if you use the Aperture "Quick Previews" functionality
    - for synching with your e.g. iPhone
    - in the Media browser dialog of e.g. iWork applications
    (am I correct and complete?)
    In my first days of Aperture 2 I increased the size to unlimited and the quality to 12, since "of course" I wanted to see the best possible quality of my pictures.
    Now I learned that previews are not used in normal Aperture workflows, so I reduced the size to the lowest possible value of 1280 and the quality to 12.
    This way I reduced the size of my library (30k JPEG photos, all referenced) from 108 GB to 33 GB.

  • Vault size vs APerture library size and related questions

    My aperture library is 50GB for some 65,000 referenced pictures...how does this compare with others? To me, it seems a bit big.
    Also odd. The vault backup of my libarary is 9.1GB ONLY! How come?
    I think that all of my pictures are referenced.....is there an easy way to check?
    If I make a new fresh library and restore from the vault, what will I loose, if anything? Will I need to reconnect pictures or anything?

    that seems about right to me. what's taking up space are previews and thumbnails. afaik, the vault doesn't hold any of those, only the database, albums, projects and configuration files.
    if you restore from a vault, all the previews and thumbnails have to be rebuilt. you can save a little space that way, because the thumbnail files don't shrink when you erase photos or move them to another project, but personally i don't think it's worth the time and effort.
    j

  • There is not enough free space on your Aperture Library Volume Question

    When importing more images to Aperture I get this:
    There is not enough free space on your Aperture Library Volume to import the selected items
    Why is this? I am a big time newbee and I am trying to take a crash coarse in Aperture. How do I bring in more photos. I only have a few hundred in there now.
    Thanks for any help
    Mark

    Lots more and very specific info is necessary for troubleshooting. Probably your hard drives is too full.
    -Allen Wicks

  • Transfering  aperture library via vault to new comp

    I apologize in advance if my question already have been answered in another thread. But I couldn't find any threads matching my problems.
    I recently bought the new iMac after my old 24" could not handle the pressure anymore. I wanted to move my aperture library from the old to the new. And ofcourse I wanted all info (adjustment changes and so on) to come with in the move. After reading a few threads on the subject I created a "Vault" that I later opened up in the new comp. At a fist glance everything looks great in aperture but when opening up a picture to make adjustments it says "image offline".
    On my old comp I can see (where my pics are stored) two aperture files:
    Aperture Library
    Aperture Library_original
    …so far so good.
    But then that are tons (well, many) folders named like my projects in aperture. And not folders within the aperture library file but stand alone…if that makes any sense.
    What am I doing wrong? I get all the pics over to my new comp with the help of Vault but can't edit any of my pics from a few months back (when for some reason aperture started to create folders outside the library file)
    On my new iMac i have 2 files
    Aperture Library
    Aperture Library_old
    ...so no folders got transfered
    /Jonatan, sweden

    It looks like your Aperture library were a referenced library. When you imported your image files you did not import the originals into the Aperture library, but stored them in folders outside the library. That are folders named like your projects that you are seeing. When Aperture needs to access the originals to render edited versions, it will reference the image files in those folders, see this section in the Aperture 3 User Manual: Aperture 3 User Manual: Working with Referenced Images
    When you create a vault, Aperture will only include images that you imported into the library, not the originals you stored outside. You need to copy the folders with projects as well to your new mac and reconnect them to the image versions, otherwise you will not be able to edit your images.
    But it looks like you did create these folders outside accidentally and did not intend to use referenced original files. If that is so, I'd suggest to repair this, by consolidating your library.
    Select the "Photos" view in the source list of your Aperture Library and select all your images at once.
    Then use the command "File > Consolidate Originals" from the main menu bar. This will move (or copy) all referenced images from the folders outside into your Aperture library.
    When you now create a vault, it will contain all images. Use this new vault to recreate your Aperture library on your new mac.  You can also simply copy your Aperture library itself to your new mac. You do not need the detour using a vault.
    BTW: Where Aperture will store the originals image files depends on the settings in the "Import" panel. Make sure the "Store Files" option is set to "In the Aperture Library".
    Regards
    Léonie

  • Store Files - Aperture Library or Pictures

    Newbie here.
    First question asked when importing photos from iPhoto is where to store the images - Aperture Library, Where they Are or in Pictures.   I have not been able to find anything from Apple to explain the advantages of these choices. 
    Looking at the discussions, I get the impression most people use the aperture library. 
    Does anybody have some pros and cons for these options?  Or maybe just some words of widom?
    Thanks muchly.

    Both referenced and managed solutions have their advantages and disadvantages. If you research managed vs referenced Aperture 3 library you will find a ton of good info. Also, as suggested above, User Manual can be of great help.
    However, I would recommend using referenced library. If you have 10 000 or 100 000 thousand photos and would like to at any point switch to other program or also use another editing software in addition to Aperture 3, you may run into issues and lots of work. Having used Aperture for about 8 months, I just reloaded entire Aperture 3 and created brand new setup with referenced library. I created folder structure on the hard drive that is reflected in Aperture's folders and projects. For example, starting with the root folder on the hard drive.
    hard drive folders                            Aperture 3 structure
    Photos
    Travel                                             folder Travel
       American South-West '08                folder American South-West
         Utah                                              folder Utah
          Bryce Canyon                                 project Bryce Canyon
           Arches                                            project Arches
            Canyonlands                                    project Canyonlands
    Of course this is only an example. Everybody's work flow will be different, one solution can't fit all here but in either case, I would definitely recommend referenced model.

  • ITunes doesn't see Aperture Library - iMovie doesn't see Aperture Library

    Issues:
    Nearly all of my videos in the Aperture/iPhoto library do not show up when I select iPhoto library option in iMovie and iMovie is unable to locate them in any other way.  Sometimes the option to select the iPhoto library is completely missing.
    iTunes does not recognize my Aperture library, and I get the following message:
    "Your Aperture Library could not be found. Open the preferences window in Aperture and enable the preference to share previews with other applications." After reading through forums and multiple Genius Bar appointments here is most of what I have done:
    Created multiple new Aperture libraries, selected them in Aperture, rebooted, switched back and forth - Note:  iTunes DID recognize the new blank libraries
    Booted Aperture with the Command + Option keys and run all three options to repair permssions and even rebuilt the database
    Booted Aperture with the Option key and selected the library I was using all along (this worked for someone in a forum)
    Opened iPhoto (not Aperture) and selected an option to share photos
    Run "Verify Disk Permissions" many times under Disk Utility
    Run "Repair Disk Permissions" many times under Disk Utility
    Reinstalled OSX
    Reinstalled Aperture
    Reinstalled iTunes
    Reinstalled iMovie
    Run a virus and malware scan (no issues)
    Verified that Aperture was set to share previews and had a Genius go through all of my options to ensure they were correct in iTunes, Aperture, and iPhoto
    Have ran "Reset Home Directory Permissions and ACLs" from the Command + Option + R recovery partition multiple times.  Each time it just hangs for hours, the latest attempt ran for over 24 hours before I finally stopped it.
    Oh yes, and I found and deleted the file com.apple.iApps.plist
    None of these things fixed either of my issues.  According the the Genius at my last appointment, now I have to call Apple Care and pay to get support.  I must have misunderstood what the Genius Bar was about when I bought my Mac and why I purchased the One to One training.  Before I call Apple Care, I was hoping someone might have run across this and can help me.
    I asked the Genius if I now need to just create a new Aperture Library and move all of my content to it (that was the last resort for someone in a forum); however, he was concerned that even if this might work that I probably have deeper permission and/or other issues that need to be addressed and that doing so would not fix the root cause.
    Thanks for taking the time to read through this issue.

    Understood.  I thought perhaps the period meant that I was finished and just needed to call Apple Care and fork out the fee. 
    The formats are primarily .MOV straight from the iPhone.  Since going to a Mac, I have pretty much given up on using my Sony Handycam for family videos due to the pains of having to locate, identify, convert, and export AVCHD video to watch on Apple TV.  It is just too easy to take video with my iPhone and import it and immediately watch it, although the quality is nothing close to a dedicated video camera, especially indoors and in lower light.  All of the video formats in Aperture are supported and most all of my older home videos and Sony Handycam videos are sitting on an external drive (hoping that one day I will have the time to figure out a decent workflow to access them after I work all of the bugs out of iMovie).  Great thought though.
    All my content is managed.  After a handful of One-to-One sessions at the Apple Store, I finally learned that you could not reference videos in iMovie and had to either have them in the iMovie Events directory or in iPhoto (at least that was what she said).  Their solution was to import the videos into iPhoto so they could be easily accessed in iMovie.  After I had issues mentioned in this post their solution was for me to purchase Aperture that could handle larger libraries.  This was supposed to fix the issue and allow iMovie to see my videos.  When that didn't work they said that I needed to purchase Final Cut Pro.  I'm just a Dad who wants to make a few memorable home movies for his family and I don't think that I should have to purchase a $300 application, especially after paying a premium for my Mac and the iLife software, which I am deeply regretting.  But I digress.
    I have repaired permissions again and am in the process of repairing the library and will rebuild it again if that doesn't work.  It is taking longer so I won't be able to post the results until a later time.  Definitely worth a shot to try this again.
    If this doesn't work I will take the time to create a new Aperture library.  Like I previously mentioned, this was the last resort for another gentlemen who had a similar issue.  After doing this it might explain why the "Reset Home Directory Permissions and ACLs" from the Command + Option + R recovery partition is getting hung up and not working.  I'll post the results at a later date.  If I could save just one person the time, gas, and stress I've experienced it would be worth it.
    One additional question?  I read a gentlemen's post that passionately argued against ever using iPhoto, Aperture, or iMovie to ever manage video files.  He suggested using folders and a file naming system similar to what I used when I was on a PC using Adobe Elements.  Do you have any thoughts on that? 
    For my situation, I have two concerns:
    I'm afraid this would not allow me to watch the videos on Apple TV as simply as I can now (although I don't know this to be the case for certain).  If the videos aren't in my photo library, I'm not sure how I would be able to access them through Apple TV.
    Since I'm a proud Dad I have hundreds of video files spanning many years, so I also don't want to lose the ability to quickly peruse my event library and find content that I want to import into a project in iMovie.  At one point I imported some video files to edit that weren't stored in iMovie, and I could only see the file name and date and had to guess if there was content on it that I wanted.  When you have hundreds of clips like I do that isn't practical.
    He argued that these programs were never meant to manage content and worked much more efficiently using this method.  I'd be very interested to hear your thoughts.
    Thanks again.

  • I imported some 24P HD videos from my DSLR to Aperture but these videos do not show up in iMovie '09 for editing purposes. Although my previous 24P HD Videos from iPhoto '09 show up. Why can't I access these videos stored in Aperture library?

    I imported some 24P HD videos from my DSLR to Aperture but these videos do not show up in iMovie '09 for editing purposes. Although my previous 24P HD Videos from iPhoto '09 show up. Why can't I access these videos stored in Aperture library? I assumed that like  the videos in iPhoto, I would be able to access the videos in Aperture through iMovie. Come on Apple! I am starting to get frustrated with your products here. And this is saying a lot when I have been using and loving apple products for the last 4 years.

    Hi. My camera is a Canon 600D. And yes my videos are stored in the Aperture library and they are not referenced. Even then I tried to select all the videos in Aperture and clicked 'consolidate masters' and there was a messge that said all 'none of the files are referenced',... so they didn't need consolidating.
    I also tried preferences> export> external video editor > choose > iMovie. And then right click on the video to edit with imovie. Even then the video didn't show up in iMovie. It seems like the only option for me is to import the videos directly to iMovie which means there will be two versions of the same file stored in my computer eating up space.
    APPLE. What are you doing?

  • I have an extensive aperture library on my computer's hard drive and I want to break it up into separate smaller libraries on external hard drives.  How do I take projects from one library and add them to another one?

    I have an extensive aperture library on my computer's hard drive and I want to break it up into separate smaller libraries on external hard drives.  How do I take projects from one library and add them to another one?

    Coastal,
    Frank gave you the exact answer to your question. 
    However, I would like to ask if you are indeed asking the right question.  Do you really want different libraries?  The implications are that you have to "switch" libraries to see what's in the others, and so that your searches don't work across all of your pictures?  If so, then you asked the right question.  If not, you may be more interested in relocating your masters to multiple hard drives so your library gets smaller, instead of breaking up the library.
    nathan

Maybe you are looking for

  • CKF, RKF or Structures locking queries in Development sytem.

    Our BW environment is set up to allow "Z" and "Y" queries. When creating a "Z" or "Y" query in the dev environments if a previously transported CKF, RKF or structure is added to the query, it locks after closing. Our QEA and PEA system allows creatio

  • SOAP receiver - Message level security - Encryption

    Hello, I want to use message level security when using HTTPS. Client provided us the encryption certificate which we have uploaded in the keystore, also done the necessary settings in PI 7.1 but we are getting the below mentioned error. Message proce

  • Enhancement Request for APEX 3 - Import / export translation

    Hi, Would it be possible to add this functionality in the next release ? If we import an application that has a translation in the database (seed) into another APP_ID , we loose the translation. So for a 100+ pages application, it is really a pain to

  • WLS 6.1 SP2, iPlanet 6 & NSAPI problems

    Does anybody know of a good reference document on how to properly install the NSAPI plug-in for WLS6.1 & iPlanet6(SunOne) on Unix (Solaris). Many of the references that I have been finding are either incomplete, have typo's and are mostly Windows ori

  • WEP working with Windows and Macbook Pro - NOT with G4 laptop

    In order to get a Windows laptop connected to my home network, I changed over to WEP Encryption and have gotten the Windows laptop, my Macbook Pro, and another Powerbook G4 to connect - however, when I try to connect the other remaining G4 laptop, a