Aperture Photobooks vs. iPhoto

Does Aperture provide more photo book options than iPhoto? Is there someplace where I can see a comparison?

Michael
You can download the demo version and create a test book to see what is available as far as themes, etc. Aperture only offers 6 themes: Art Collection, Picture Book, Proof Book, Special Occasion, Stock Book and Stock Book Black. Pretty much geared to the professional photographer. The Special Occasion is the closest to a consumer type of book theme. Only
The book prices can be found here: http://www.apple.com/aperture/books/prices.html and are about the same for the same sized books thru iPhoto.
Do you Twango?

Similar Messages

  • Is it possible to export a Book from Aperture 3 to iPhoto?

    I shot a wedding for a friend and made a layout of a book on Aperture 3.
    Printed a few books which I thought were beautiful.
    I was wondering if it would be possible to export this book from Aperture (with the layout and photos intact) as a file (editable or read-only), so my friend can import and open it using iPhoto and order more copies of the book through Apple when she pleases.
    Tried Google and couldn't find an answer. Thank you for taking the time.

    How about importing from iPhoto into Aperture 3?
    I have made a photobook in iPhoto and then bought Aperture 3, but I can't find it possible to export the book in a format that I can open in Aperture. Also, when I export the book in size Large or above, iPhoto crashes.

  • How can I transfer my photobooks from iphoto 08 on osx 10.5.8 to iphoto 11 on macbook osx 10.8.1 without loosing layout?

    How can I transfer my photobooks from iphoto 08 on osx 10.5.8 to iphoto 11 on macbook osx 10.8.1 without loosing layout? I prepared 3 books in iphoto 08  and wanted to order them yesterday. I got the message, that this version is not supported anymore. I also have a macbook osx 10.8.1. However I did not manage to transfer the books to it. What can I do? I really would not like to recreate the books from scratch in th new version.

    You will have to convert your 08 library to iPhoto 11 by copying the library to your Macbook and opening it with iPhoto 11.
    However, check to see if the theme you're using in 08 is available in 11.  If it isn't you'll probably lose the book or be assigned to some other theme. 
    If the theme you've chosen isn't available in 11 find one that is available in both versions and convert to it in the 08 library before you move it to 11. 
    OT

  • IPhoto 09/Aperture 2 versus iPhoto 09/Adobe Lightroom 2

    Does any one have any recommendations on which combination works best?

    Lightroom has no awareness of the existence of iPhoto. There is no way that it can recognise the iPhoto Library or any of the work you have done in it - albums, keywords etc. To move files or photos between the two you will need to export from one and import to the other.
    Aperture recognises the iPhoto Library and there is a command there to facilitate migration from iPhoto to Aperture. This process captures your Events, Albums, keywords and so forth.
    Also, with the Aperture -> Show iPhoto Library command you can import individual photos over to Aperture.
    From iPhoto the Show Aperture Library command means you can access the Previews in your Aperture Library.
    At heart, these three applications do the same job. Aperture and Lightroom are firmly focussed on the Pro user shooting high volumes of RAW. They both offer distinct advantages over iPhoto in processing RAW, no matter what the volume.
    What iPhoto can offer both of these are - very simple books, calendars and so on and much better slideshows options.
    Regards
    TD

  • How to sync with Aperture instead of iphoto

    Hi,
    I have an iphone 3gs and when I connect the iphone it shows up in iphoto so I can import the images it has taken, but I would prefer it to show up in Aperture as I prefer to use that, I cannot find any settings to make it default to Aperture instead of iphoto, does anyone know what I should be doing?
    Thanks for reading,
    Julie

    Image Capture app., preferences, select which app. to launch when a camera is attached, select Aperture.
    One of your choices will be "other", you can select aperture from here.
    Message was edited by: wjosten

  • Creating a photobook in iPhoto 09

    I have created a photobook in iPhoto which I am very happy with. I have added text but when I click on the tab 'Buy It' I get a message saying .....Your book appears to have default text that has not yet been edited. Printed books will not include this text. Do you want to continue with your order?....
    I really don't want to get the book printed without the text. I have tried using the default text but I still get the same message. I want to record in pictures and text the first year of my granddaughter life.
    Does anyone kindly have a solution to my problem.
    Thank you and happy new year to all Mac Fans
    Maggi

    that means that some place there is the latin default text unedited and it will not print - your text will - and Before ordering your book preview it using this method - http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1040 - and save the resulting PDF for reference - the delivered book will match it.
    That is the only way to be positive of what you are getting
    LN

  • Problem Importing Photos from Aperture 3 into iPhoto '11

    I store my photos in Aperture 3, but import them into iPhoto to create calendars, cards, etc. I usually work with RAW or high resolution JPG images in Aperture. However, when I import these into the new iPhoto '11, it automatically converts my RAW images into very low resolution images (e.g., 100-200k instead of at least 1-2MB). I cannot seem to find an option to change this. This was not a problem with the old iPhoto. To import, I start in iPhoto, then click "Show Aperture Library", then drag my photos/folder. I would like to have an option to import images as RAW files, or just high res JPGs.
    I know I can export my Aperture images to the desktop, then import them into iPhoto for a temporary fix, but that is such as hassle, especially since iPhoto and Aperture are supposed to work well together. Thanks for any suggestions!

    Aperture creates preview images that contain all the adjustments you've made to the master image. These previews are what is shared with other apps such as iLife or if you drag and drop an image out of Aperture to another app or the Finder.
    The size of the previews is controlled in Aperture Preferences. Open Aperture Preferences and click on the Previews icon at the top. In the bottom of this dialog there is a popup menu titled "Photo Preview". This is the setting that controls the size of the image Aperture shares with iPhoto. Change this setting to the size you want.
    But wait, you're not done yet. Changing this setting does nothing until a new preview is created in Aperture. If you right click an image in Aperture there is a menu item near the bottom named "Update Preview". But what you really need is "Generate Preview". Right click the image and then hold down the option key and you'll see "Update Preview" change to "Generate Preview". Choose "Generate Preview" and a new preview will be created using the new size setting you made in Preferences. You need to do this for each and every image you wish to share at the larger size. You can select multiple images before selecting the "Generate Preview" command to speed things up.
    Now when you share an image from Aperture to iPhoto the new larger file will be used. The advantage of smaller previews is your Aperture library will also be smaller but the trade off is what you get in other apps that are using your images.

  • How Is Aperture Better Then iPhoto At Organizing Photos?

    I was just wondering what sets Aperture apart from iPhoto when it comes to organizing my photos?
    I just purchased Aperture for this reason and was just wanting to know some of the key features for organizing in Aperture.
    Thanks,
    Sam
    Please feel free to tell me anything you know about Aperture because I would love to know!

    Asset management tools the key is to keep your images organised as your library of photos grows and grows. And Aperture is much more of a king than iPhoto in this regard.
    In iphoto for example the search facility is fairly simple to use and yes you can use keywords to find an image, however as you library grows and your workflow becomes much more sophisticated, and it will, when you work as a photographer, you will want to have a much more powerful search facility such as to able to go into Aperture and search for images using more criteria. In smart albums in iPhoto there is a list of words of metadata fields to use for searching for images, but in aperture there is literally dozens of metadata fields you can choose from to powerfully find any image efficiently and quickly. And in Aperture it records every little detail of your cameras data that you can use in your search facility.
    There is a few ways how to efficiently organize your images in Aperture what I have mentioned just above is really just a tip of the iceberg.

  • Organizing photos in aperture 4 vs iPhoto 09

    Ok editing and all aside, for the sake of organizing is aperture better than iPhoto 09? I know it is expensive and iPhoto is free but I'd just like to know if it organizes or has more options for organizing than iPhoto, is the interface better? Thanks guys.

    for the sake of organizing is aperture better than iPhoto 09?
    Organising where? In the Application or in the Finder?
    Averaged out of the cost of iLIfe, iPhoto is a $16 app. Aperture is somewhat more expensive. Of course it has extra options in just about every area of the workflow.
    So what's "better"? Do you need the extra features?
    One way to look at it:
    Are you a home photographer? Shoot the kids birthday party holidays and vacations? shooting jpegs on a point and shoot or a DSLR on Auto setting? iPhoto is probably what you're looking for.
    A pro? A serious hobbyist? Shooting Raw or high volumes of jpeg? Sounds more like someone who'll get value from Aperture to me.
    But the best thing: download the trial and see.
    Regards
    TD

  • Before Mountain Lion and Aperture 3.4 Iphoto libraries would show up as a project.  Can I still have this feature?

    Before Mountain Lion and Aperture 3.4 Iphoto libraries would show up as a project.  Can I still have this feature?  I want to keep my iphoto libraries on another drive but now it appears the only way I can have Aperture search all libraries for a photo is to merge the aperture library with all the iphoto libraries. In the past the photos were referenced photos in their orginal libraries but now we are creating one big aperture library.  Does this make sense?  I liked the old way were the iphoto libraries showed up in the left window as a project.  Does anyone know of a work around?

    Try trash the com.apple.iPhoto.plist file from the HD/Users/ Your Name / library / preferences folder.
    (On 10.7 or later: Hold the option (or alt) key while clicking on the Go menu in Finder to access the User Library)
    (Remember you'll need to reset your User options afterwards. These include minor settings like the window colour and so on. Note: If you've moved your library you'll need to point iPhoto at it again.)
    What's the plist file?
    For new users: Every application on your Mac has an accompanying plist file. It records certain User choices. For instance, in your favourite Word Processor it remembers your choice of Default Font, on your Web Browser is remembers things like your choice of Home Page. It even recalls what windows you had open last if your app allows you to pick up from where you left off last. The iPhoto plist file remembers things like the location of the Library, your choice of background colour, whether you are running a Referenced or Managed Library, what preferences you have for autosplitting events and so on. Trashing the plist file forces the app to generate a new one on the next launch, and this restores things to the Factory Defaults. Hence, if you've changed any of these things you'll need to reset them. If you haven't, then no bother. Trashing the plist file is Mac troubleshooting 101.

  • Concerned about Aperture backups  vs. iPhoto backups

    Hi All,
    I've just installed Aperture 2.0 and after reading a lot of the posts here regarding the superior way that Aperture handles files compared to iPhoto, I wanted to start using Aperture for everything regarding organizing my photos.
    I have a couple of concerns/questions though...
    1) After importing my iPhoto library into the Aperture library as managed masters, I see that I can't actually access the originals/masters inside the Aperture library via Finder. When I right-click on the Aperture Library and choose Show Package Contents in Finder, I see the albums and events, but I do not see any of the actual photos.
    This concerns me regarding backups... even if I use the Vault feature in Aperture, I wouldn't have access to the actual masters outside of Aperture. If I want to migrate to a different photo cataloging/editing app later, can this be done?
    With iPhoto, I can access the originals when I need to AND they get backed up with Time Capsule or any other system backup.
    2) I've read a lot about Aperture's non-destructive editing being a strength... Isn't this the case with iPhoto as well? In Finder, the iPhoto library contains a folder called "Originals" and one called "Modified"... the Original folder contains the masters and the Modified folder contains copies of the masters to which I've applied edits. Wouldn't this be considered non-destructive as well?
    3) Given these two above points, I'm considering starting over and importing my iPhoto library in Aperture as referenced files. My two concerns here are this:
    a) What are the draw backs, if any, of doing this? Won't I get the same benefits using Aperture with referenced files?
    b) If I add new photos to iPhoto after I've imported the library into Aperture as referenced files, I'm assuming they won't show up in Aperture, right? I guess the alternative is to just open up the iPhoto library in Aperture and not import anything... anything I'd be missing here with regards to Aperture's superiority over iPhoto?
    Thanks so much for any answers and advice. I appreciate it.
    Rick
    Message was edited by: rickdeet
    Message was edited by: rickdeet

    rickdeet
    Welcome to the Apple Discussions.
    1) After importing my iPhoto library into the Aperture library as managed masters, I see that I can't actually access the originals/masters inside the Aperture library via Finder. When I right-click on the Aperture Library and choose Show Package Contents in Finder, I see the albums and events, but I do not see any of the actual photos.
    a: The Library structure of Aperture is quite different. Yes the files are there, but they are inside further packages. Each approject is in itself a further package file, and it contains - among other things - the actual files.
    Now this opens several lines of possibilities. 1: I post a lot on the iPhoto forum and I always advise users to use a Managed Library. iPhoto’s abilities with Referenced Libraries are poor. This is not the case with Aperture. It has very strong abilities with Referenced Libraries, so much so that many folks recommend them as default.
    That said, if you prefer the managed library, then backing up the Library Package does exactly that. Just like iPhoto, you get everything.
    If you want to migrate to a different application, well, frankly the right way to do that is to export the images - same as iPhoto. But that said, if you get inside the Library and then the projects, there are your Original files. Just a single extra layer away.
    2) I've read a lot about Aperture's non-destructive editing being a strength... Isn't this the case with iPhoto as well? In Finder, the iPhoto library contains a folder called "Originals" and one called "Modified"... the Original folder contains the masters and the Modified folder contains copies of the masters to which I've applied edits. Wouldn't this be considered non-destructive as well?
    Yes and no... Aperture works very differently from iPhoto. As you point out, in iPhoto edits are carried out on a copy of the Original and saved as the Modified version. However, this modified version is a generation down - and therefore more compressed - than the Original. That said, with the Non Destructive feature of iPhoto 08 and later, you’re never more than one generation away from the Original +if you edit in iPhoto only.
    Aperture works very differently. There is no Modified Version. When you edit an Original in Aperture your decisions are recorded in the Database and applied to the pic live as you view it. The only time a new file is produced is when you go to use it - email it, print it, whatever...
    Given these two above points, I'm considering starting over and importing my iPhoto library in Aperture as referenced files. My two concerns here are this:
    a) What are the draw backs, if any, of doing this? Won't I get the same benefits using Aperture with referenced files?
    Do you mean “Won’t I get the same benefits using iPhoto with Referenced Files? IF so, the answer is no. And if you ever have to re-attach the masters to a iPhoto Library, then you can set aside the weekend to do a lot of clicking.
    There are no drawbacks with using a Referenced Library in Aperture. If the numbers of photos you process are very large there are distinct advantages to doing so - masters stored on multiple disks for instance.
    b) If I add new photos to iPhoto after I've imported the library into Aperture as referenced files, I'm assuming they won't show up in Aperture, right? I guess the alternative is to just open up the iPhoto library in Aperture and not import anything... anything I'd be missing here with regards to Aperture's superiority over iPhoto?
    Why would you import to iPhoto is you’re using Aperture? A much better workflow would be to import to Aperture and then share the Aperture Previews with iPhoto. But no, the relationship between Aperture and iPhoto is not dynamic. They don’t read each other’s Libraries as they change.
    Aperture’s superiority over iPhoto is down to much better file management controls, much better processing tools with more more fine control over them, much better everything to do with processing photos.
    iPhoto has better slideshows and it has Calendars.
    Regards
    TD

  • Can Aperture 3 and Iphoto sinc library ?

    Hi .
    I´m not photo professional but I want more reosurce with my photos. I bought Aperture 3 and I feel I have most I need from Iphoto. I don´t want have too many space with two photo libraries and have a risk to loose something. It´s possible to sinc my aperture library with Iphoto ? For a hobbist you think Iphoto is enough ?
    Thanks,
    Daniel Rodrigues
    Brazil

    No, you cannot sync your iPhoto Library and your Aperture Library.
    You will have to make up your mind which of the two you will want to use in future.
    If you really feel the need for the advanced editing and organizational tools Aperture has to offer, you can have an easy transit from iPhoto to Aperture by importing your iPhoto Library as it is into Aperture. This will keep all your meta tags, events (now called projects), albums, slideshows, etc.
    Aperture has a steep learning curve, but it is possible to use initially no more than than you did use in iPhoto and so gradually get to know the program.
    The way back from Aperture to iPhoto is not so easy, for you cannot import your Aperture lIbrary into iPhoto. It is a one-way road. So try it thoroughly before you commit yourself.
    Regards
    Léonie

  • Moving photobook from iPhoto 6

    I've created a photobook in iphoto 6 but it apprears to no longer be supported for printing.  Is there a way to move this photobook to my husbands macbook pro which has iphoto '09?
    Thanks,

    You'll need to copy th Library that contains the book to the other machine and then open it with 09.
    You can't just move a book. It has to be the Library.
    Regards
    TD

  • I cannot buy a photobook with IPhoto since I always get an error when submitting... any idea ?

    I cannot buy a photobook with IPhoto since I always get an error when submitting... any idea ?

    May depend on which version of iPhoto you have installed.
    Check out this thread >   https://discussions.apple.com/message/15324917#15324917

  • Photo preview blank when browsing Aperture Library from iPhoto

    Hello to everyone,
    I need to import in iPhoto some photo of my Aperture's Library, but when I open it from iPhoto I can see all the pictures exept the lastest that I've imported in the Aperture Library (that have been taken with a Canon EOS 550D with RAW format): I see a blank icon (that can I select and import in my iPhoto library) instead its preview.
    In Aperture the Canon EOS 550D RAW format works correctly, but I can't see the preview of the image in the browser under iPhoto.
    Can anyone help me solving this problem?
    I have Snow Leopard 10.6.7 (with all the updates) and the lastest versione of both iPhoto and Aperture.
    Thanks.
    Andrea

    Hi Terence,
    thanks for the reply, but I've already regenerated all my previous (the entire library), but with no success.. I still continue to see a blank icon browsing the Aperture Library from iPhoto.
    But I see that each time I enter in Aperture, it alway restart processing library (but only for some photos).. when it finish that process, I close Aperture and when I enter in it again, it restart processing the same photos.. again and again and again
    Any other suggestion?
    Regards.
    Andrea

Maybe you are looking for

  • Can you confirm a security hole in file sharing?

    I have found a very annoying security hole, and I wonder if it is unique to my setup. I have my mini set up with file sharing turned on. It has 5 accounts, one administrator, rest ordinary users. My login for the administrative user on my laptop is t

  • Urgent - Error calling web service generated from plsql package

    Hi, I am using Jdeveloper 10.1.3 production release. I am trying to publish a plsql packaged procedure as a web service. My first question is - When I am publishing the plsql API as a WS, should I choose the style Document/Wrapped or RPC Literal? Doc

  • From Premiere Pro in Windows to FCP X

    Hi I run Premiere Pro CC on a winows PC and want to export some clips to FCP X on my imac. The clips are 1920 x 1080. Which codec / format would you guys recommend? Thanks. Ulf

  • App switching (cmd-tab) and Expose stop working

    This has happened to me several times in the last couple of days: Suddenly the cmd-tab command for switching applications stops working, as well as my active corners for Expose. No matter if I use the laptop's keyboard or an external one. After a res

  • IPhone won't sync Navigon - says there is no room, but there is plenty

    I have been having this issue with my wife's 8gb iPhone. With each Navigon update, you have to install a new 1.2ish gig application. To do this, it requires that we delete the app from her phone to open the room to re-install it. However, even with i