Geotagging in iPhoto to Lightroom

I've done a lot of geotagging in iPhoto and was thinking of trying out Lightroom.  Would all the geotags be preserved, or are they just exclusive to iPhoto and Aperture?

To access your Mac iPhoto images for use in Photoshop and Lightroom
1. In the Finder, navigate to Users > [user name] > Pictures > iPhoto Library.
2. Control-click (Right-click) the iPhoto Library file and choose Show Package Contents.
3. A Finder window opens that shows the contents. The Masters folder (or called Originals folder) contains all of the photographs that are in iPhoto.
Photoshop cannot access this folder, but if you make a duplicate of the folder, the dupe will be accessible -- so:
4. Control-click (Right-click) the folder named Masters (or Originals) and choose Duplicate.
5. Drag the duplicate folder which is named "Masters copy" or “Originals copy” from the iPhoto Library Finder window to the Desktop.
6. Open images in Photoshop or Lightroom from the file on the desktop.
or
7.  Rename the folder and move it elsewhere (probably to the Pictures folder), if desired.
    Then access the files in the folder via Lightroom and Photoshop

Similar Messages

  • How do I move the photos in iPhoto to Lightroom ?

    How do I move the photos in iPhoto to Lightroom?  Thanks, I am a novice to Lightroom.

    To access your Mac iPhoto images for use in Photoshop and Lightroom
    1. In the Finder, navigate to Users > [user name] > Pictures > iPhoto Library.
    2. Control-click (Right-click) the iPhoto Library file and choose Show Package Contents.
    3. A Finder window opens that shows the contents. The Masters folder (or called Originals folder) contains all of the photographs that are in iPhoto.
    Photoshop cannot access this folder, but if you make a duplicate of the folder, the dupe will be accessible -- so:
    4. Control-click (Right-click) the folder named Masters (or Originals) and choose Duplicate.
    5. Drag the duplicate folder which is named "Masters copy" or “Originals copy” from the iPhoto Library Finder window to the Desktop.
    6. Open images in Photoshop or Lightroom from the file on the desktop.
    or
    7.  Rename the folder and move it elsewhere (probably to the Pictures folder), if desired.
        Then access the files in the folder via Lightroom and Photoshop

  • I'm new to Lightroom.  Struggling with downloading from iPhoto to Lightroom.  Pls help??

    I have installed Lightroom@ on my mac.  Trying to import photos which are saved in iPhoto.  Have found your link which says I need to create a master copy and copy to my desktop, which I'm in the process of doing, but: (1) it says it will take 11 hours!  (2) do I have to do this every time I want to access recently added photos to iPhoto??  Basically, I'm trying to find the quickest and most efficient way to transfer my photos from iPhoto to lightroom.  Pls advise.  Thanks. Heidi

    No, you do this one time only
    By the way, if you're going to use Lightroom, you wouldn't add new photos to iPhoto, you import them into Lightroom.

  • Need help with iPhoto Aperture Lightroom migration

    Would really appreciate some advice on this last stage of the move from iPhoto to Lightroom, as Im sure getting my files into the right place is crucial.
    Here is where I'm at right now: 
    I had an old iphoto (v8.3 or something) library with about 30,000 images on a macbook pro (late 2008) which I moved over to my newer iMac, to merge with an existing library of about 8,000 photos which I was managing with Aperture.
    Per some advice I got on how to consolidate iPhoto libraries, I opened the old iPhoto library on my newer iMac running the latest iPhoto version, and then I honestly can't remember exactly what I did after that... but I got both libraries into one, and now I have all my photos merged and sorted into folders and projects, and all looks great. Except for one thing: its still showing up as an iphoto library in finder. There is no Aperture library file or folder anywhere. I guess I needed to "import" at some point, rather than simply opening the library? 
    My original plan was to get everything into an Aperture library before moving to Lightroom. Maybe it doesn't matter. My main concern before I make the move to Lightroom is keeping my newly organized folder hierarchy (with all projects and albums in tact). And I understand I need to change from managed to referenced library for this. So is it just as simple as "relocating the originals"?     

    Sorry, maybe I can rephrase my question:
    My photos are already sorted into this structure, in Aperture, as a managed library:
    PHOTOGRAPHY (main folder)
    - PROCESSED
            GROUP A
            GROUP B
            GROUP C
            PROJECTS
                 PROJECT 1
                 PROJECT 2
                 PROJECT 3
    - WORK IN PROGRESS
            GROUP D
            GROUP E
            GROUP F
    How can I make this into a referenced library?
    I understand I need to select all my photos and then choose the "relocate originals" option.
    What comes next?  

  • Geotagging with iPhoto and Flickr

    Question in a quick and detailed version:
    (quick version: )
    What do you all think is the best way to geotag photos that are already stored in your iPhoto library? If you have a workflow involving iPhoto, geotagging, and possibly uploading to flickr or some sort of image sharing site like that, please post it!
    (detailed version:)
    I recently discovered geotagging, thanks to Flickr adding the new "map" function, whereby you can drag and drop your flickr photos onto a yahoo map. This is great and all, but it only affects the images I have on flickr. . . it does nothing for the EXIF data of my images I have stored in iPhoto.
    Basically, my goal is to not have to do anything twice. I want to be able to geotag my photos once. . . write a caption/description for my photos once, apply iPhoto keywords to the photos once, then upload to flickr and have all the caption and tag (=flickr version of keyword) and geotag data already applied by the time the photo hits the web.
    My current workflow:
    -Import photos from camera directly into iPhoto
    -Make subset album of best photos which I will later upload to flickr
    -In iPhoto, write descriptions and apply keywords to each of those best photos
    -Use the FlickrExport plugin to get those photos onto flickr.
    -Once photos are in flickr, use flickr's "map" function to drag and drop photos to their location.
    Pros of my workflow: Now I have keywords (= tags in flickr) and captions both in iPhoto AND on Flickr, and I only had to apply and write these once.
    Cons: While my flickr photos are now geotagged on the web site, my photos in iPhoto remain locationless.
    I have googled around and learned a bit about applications like Geotagger, which lets you assign lat/lon/altitude information to your photos (jpegs only, I think) using GoogleEarth BEFORE you import the photos into iPhoto. Basically this adds lat/lon/alt values to your photos EXIF data, but you have to do this before importing the photo into iPhoto, because iPhoto only reads the EXIF data into its cache once (when the photo is imported). Hence, if you imported your photos into iPhoto first, and then used Geotagger, the original photo's EXIF data WOULD be updated, but iPhoto would not DISPLAY (or possibly export) that EXIF data properly.
    Ideally, I'd love to geotag my photos after they have already been imported into iPhoto. Geotagging before importing to iPhoto is obviously an option, but it means I have to look at a list of photos in the finder, open them one by one in Preview or something so I know which image it is and where it is, THEN use geotagger to geotag. . . THEN import them to iPhoto. It would be more convenient to do this geotagging after I've already imported the pics into iPhoto and used the nice gui to decide which pics I want to geotag in the first place.
    Also, if I want to go back and geotag photos that I imported into my iPhoto library several years ago, there does not appear to be a way to do that at all without exporting the photo, geotagging, and re-importing it. If I do that, then the newly re-imported and geotagged photo will no longer have the description/caption or keywords that I spent all that time applying some time in the past, and I have extra work on my hands! Ugh. Why doesn't iPhoto support geotagging? This seems like something Apple should have thought of.

    Mike G.:
    Yes, iPhoto has had fields in its "show photo info" windows for lat/lon/alt for a while now. It gets all this photo info from the EXIF data that exists in the jpeg before you import it into iPhoto. This EXIF data is written to your photo file by your digital camera, usually. When you import the photo file into iPhoto, the program reads in the EXIF data (time photo was taken, exposure, f-stop, etc.) and populates the fields in iPhoto's "show photo info" windows.
    Hence, if you already have lat/lon/alt data in the EXIF of your photo file BEFORE you import it into iPhoto, then iPhoto will populate those fields upon import.
    The "bug" in iPhoto, however, is that the EXIF file is never again refreshed after the photo has been imported. That is, if you import a photo, then manually go and and change the EXIF data in that original photo file (not in iPhoto), then the EXIF data will have been changed, but iPhoto won't know about it. It will just show you the cached EXIF info that it grabbed when it first imported the file.
    Hence, if you want iPhoto to show you the lat/lon/alt data, you have to geotag BEFORE you import. OR, if you've already imported a non-geotagged photo, you can export that file, geotag it outside of iPhoto, and then re-import. But then, of course, you have to re-apply all the keywords and caption information to the newly re-imported photo. (pain in the butt!)
    Of course, this is all sort of nitpicky: my only complaint is that iPhoto doesn't SHOW you the lat/lon exif data if you geotag after iPhoto import. But that lat/lon data IS still in the photo file. You can see this by using the iPhoto Flickr plugin to upload your geotagged photo to Flickr: when it shows up in flickr, the photo will have its lat/lon info and be properly placed on the map.
    I just think it would be nice if you could see your geotagged photos lat/lon info in iPhoto without having to go to so much trouble.

  • Geotagging in iPhoto or Flickr?

    If photos are geotagged in Flickr, is there any way to easily bring that lat/long data into iPhoto? Conversely, if the photos are geotagged in iPhoto, can that geographic info be easily transferred to Flickr? In other words, if I expect to have the photos in both Flickr and iPhoto, is there an easy way to input the location data only once and have it available in both iPhoto and Flickr?

    Mike G.:
    Yes, iPhoto has had fields in its "show photo info" windows for lat/lon/alt for a while now. It gets all this photo info from the EXIF data that exists in the jpeg before you import it into iPhoto. This EXIF data is written to your photo file by your digital camera, usually. When you import the photo file into iPhoto, the program reads in the EXIF data (time photo was taken, exposure, f-stop, etc.) and populates the fields in iPhoto's "show photo info" windows.
    Hence, if you already have lat/lon/alt data in the EXIF of your photo file BEFORE you import it into iPhoto, then iPhoto will populate those fields upon import.
    The "bug" in iPhoto, however, is that the EXIF file is never again refreshed after the photo has been imported. That is, if you import a photo, then manually go and and change the EXIF data in that original photo file (not in iPhoto), then the EXIF data will have been changed, but iPhoto won't know about it. It will just show you the cached EXIF info that it grabbed when it first imported the file.
    Hence, if you want iPhoto to show you the lat/lon/alt data, you have to geotag BEFORE you import. OR, if you've already imported a non-geotagged photo, you can export that file, geotag it outside of iPhoto, and then re-import. But then, of course, you have to re-apply all the keywords and caption information to the newly re-imported photo. (pain in the butt!)
    Of course, this is all sort of nitpicky: my only complaint is that iPhoto doesn't SHOW you the lat/lon exif data if you geotag after iPhoto import. But that lat/lon data IS still in the photo file. You can see this by using the iPhoto Flickr plugin to upload your geotagged photo to Flickr: when it shows up in flickr, the photo will have its lat/lon info and be properly placed on the map.
    I just think it would be nice if you could see your geotagged photos lat/lon info in iPhoto without having to go to so much trouble.

  • How to import photos from iPhoto to Lightroom?

    Hey Guys, How do I export photos from iPhoto to Lightroom? I deleted them from the SD Card so I cannot import them directly to Lightroom. Im using a mac so its all very confusing for me. Please help me., Hey Guys, How do I export photos from iPhoto to Lightroom? I deleted them from the SD Card so I cannot import them directly to Lightroom. Im using a mac so its all very confusing for me. Please help me.

    To simply import the original files is quite a simple process.
    Locate the iPhoto Library (default is your Pictures Folder). Right click on it and select "Show Package Contents".
    Locate the Masters folder and drag it onto the Lightroom icon or an open Library window. This will invoke the Import command.
    Be sure "Include Subfolders" is checked.
    Now you can import all the original files.
    If your goal is to maintain structure of the Events it gets a little more tedious. Drag the event onto the Lightroom icon or the Library window. Once imported you can group them into a Collection Name that mimics the Event.
    Repeat with other events.
    With the impending demise of iPhoto and Aperture, I suspect Apple may be working with Adobe to develop an automated process that will also maintain metadata that was added in those programs. If you can wait a while, it may be worth it.

  • OK to use both iPhoto and Lightroom?

    I have a late-model 27” iMac (Lion) with all of my many thousands of photos stored and organized in iPhoto with the help of iPhoto Library Manager. For editing my digital images I have not used iPhoto but rather Photoshop Elements (currently Elements 10) as an external editor. I have investigated use of Aperture for managing and editing my photos, but my research indicates that Lightroom is a better program. Therefore, I prefer to use Lightroom. So here’s what I’m thinking of doing:
    1. Leave all of my existing photos in iPhoto and continue to edit them using Elements as an external editor.
    2. Install Lightroom and designate that all new images imported into my iMac go into Lightroom.
    3. Edit and manage all new images with Lightroom using Elements as an external editor to perform those editing
    functions that Lightroom cannot do.
    Is this a workable arrangement? Are you aware of any problems with such a setup? I‘d like to avoid being hit with any big surprises! I would appreciate feedback, especially from anybody who has tried this or a similar method.
    Bob

    Old Toad,
    Thanks for responding.
    Please re-read my post. I never said that I intended to use Lightroom to edit photos that are in my iPhoto Library. On the contrary I said that my thought was to continue to use Elements for editing the images in my iPhoto library.
    My purpose is to avoid having to move all of my existing photos from iPhoto to Lightroom. I have reviewed some online tutorials on what's required to move photos from iPhoto to Lightroom, and it appears to be a long, involved, and tedious task, particularly if thousands of photos are involved as they are in my case. It's not a job that I would look forward to.
    Bob

  • How do I migrate photos from iPhoto into Lightroom 5?

    Okay. I've got all my photos organised in iPhoto, but I've seen the writing on the wall about Apple discontinuing iPhoto.
    So I've taken out a subscription for Creative Cloud 2014 including Photoshop & Lightroom 5.
    My question is:- How do I migrate all my photos including organising them into Events / Collections from iPhoto to Lightroom 5?
    I've seen a tutorial that recommended downloading a free trial of Photoshop Elements 12 to use that as a sort of 'missing link' between the two apps, but it didn't work in that it didn't keep my photos organised in Events / Collections. I just ended up with a load of esoterically generically named folders which made no sense.
    Surely there must be a way, shouldn't there?

    Have you tried some of the online articles?
    e.g. http://lightroomsolutions.com/articles/migrating-from-aperture-to-lightroom-where-do-i-beg in/

  • Migrating iPhoto to Lightroom 3 on new lion osx

      I am trying to open iphoto using lightroom 3 or bridge. I have found a suggestion from lightrooomsecrets but it was for the previous osx and does not work the same with lion.  Has anyone had success doing this?

    Sorry can anyone else shed any further light on this?
    As per Brett's advice i'm linked to HD/Applications/Adobe Photoshop Elements 9/Adobe Photoshop Elements
    I now seem to be able to edit in PSE9 by exporting my image from LR as PSD and then dragging onto the PSE icon. But I can't get the app to open via Photo>Edit Photo>Edit photo in PSE.
    would it have anything to do with me still having PSE catalog in use as well as LR catalog?

  • Does anyone know how to take photos from IPHOTO into Lightroom?

    does anyone know how to take photos from IPHOTO into Lightroom?

    Because Apple has dropped "Aperture" and is switching users away from "iPhoto" to a new photo application called "Photo" so that they are more fully integrated with the Yosemite 10 and the iOS 8.3 going forward there are some instructions how to import photos into Lightroom without losing to much metadata or other information. Go under Lightroom help and follow he instructions.

  • Migration from iPhoto to Lightroom 3 for Apple OS X 10.6

    Dear all
    This question refers to the Apple version of Lightroom.
    Do you know any way of migrating all RAW, tiff, jpg, etc. files from iPhoto to Lightroom 3beta while conserving the original format? Ideally the migration should replicate also the iPhoto folders in Lightroom folders, so that I don't have to recreate the order pre-existing in iPhoto.
    Many thanks
    Mõmmibeebi

    Not correct at all - please see my previous response to a similar post.
    Although you may want to check my work - I don't know a thing about iPhoto - I'm assuming the iPhoto directory structure is also a disk directory structure, like Aperture can be - is that correct? Or is it a figment of iPhoto's imagination, so to speak - if so, disregard everything I said in this post and the other one too.
    Rob

  • Transferring photos from iphoto to Lightroom 5

    I am trying to transfer photo files from iphoto to lightroom 5. I don't want to transfer all of the photos, only certain ones. I did see the posts about transferring the Photoshop Elements and then to Lightroom 5. Also, I'm way over the reasonable limit of files in iphoto - 23,000 images. Any suggestions? Is it reasonable to transfer that many files to Elements and then Lightroom? Or should I try to pare it down first?

    If you want to transfer photos with your adjustments it is best to export versions from iPhoto to the desktop. Better still create folders in Finder and put them in a permanent location.
    Then import into Lightroom from that location using "Add" in the LR import dialog.

  • Download iPhoto to lightroom? when masters folder is huge?

    https://helpx.adobe.com/lightroom/help/import-iphoto.html  Here are the directions.... but I'm lost at step one.
    Background....
    CC new subscriber. Mac up to date.
    1st time ever to use lightroom & photoshop. Trying for over 12 hours. Ready to throw it all out the window & wondering why the heck did I ever spend this much money on something.  Watched about 45 how-to videos.
    I am completely missing something.
    I just want onen little file pictures to be put in lightroom. When I turned my head, I had 4,386 download from my pictures folder on my hardrive; none that I wanted. So I clicked them and pressed remove.
    SO..... Now when I go to find Lightroom using the magnifying glass....
    I see this:  <there should be a picture here!>
    I really don't care what! I just want my little file from iphoto called WVLHS to be in lightroom so I can edit these stinkin' pictures. UGH!!!!!!!!
    Begging for help.
    From a kindergarten teacher who REALLY has to begin to learn to say NO when people ask me to do things at the last minute and I have NO idea what I am doing!
    This doesn't even come close to what I'm trying to do... this was supposed to be the EASY PART!!!!
    Here are the directions I am trying to follow......
    To import photos from iPhoto into Lightroom, first you have to help Lightroom find the original photos, which are hidden in a package file. Then, you can copy or add the photos to a Lightroom catalog just like you would import any other photos from a folder on your computer.
    Note: These instructions are for iPhoto '11 version 9.2.
    In the Finder, navigate to your iPhoto package file. By default, it's located in /Users/[user name]/Pictures, and it's called iPhoto Library. 
    Control-click the iPhoto Library file and choose Show Package Contents. 
    A Finder window opens that shows the contents of the package file. The Masters folder contains all of the photos that are in iPhoto. However, Lightroom cannot access this folder.
    Control-click the folder named Masters and choose Duplicate.
    <<<<<<ACK! I CAN'T IT SAYS THERE ISN'T ENOUGH ROOM.....!>>>>>>
    It's listed by years....is there a way to just do the last year?
    When I did; it began to copy right away, I couldn't go onto the next step.
    Drag the folder named "Masters copy" from the iPhoto Library Finder window to your Desktop.Lightroom can see this folder. 
    Open Lightroom and drag the Masters copy folder into the Grid view of the Library module.The import window opens, with your iPhoto files selected in the preview area. By default, Lightroom wants to Add these photos to your catalog. Select Copy or Move, if preferred, and specify the destination folder and other options in the panels on the right side of the import window. 

    Hi Kglad,
    Thanks for the response!
    When I click it to follow the directions, it immediately begins to make a copy. It won't let me put it anywhere. For example; on the picture, do you see where it says 2014 copy 2? That's what started to happen when I went to follow these directions:  < Control-click the folder named Masters and choose Duplicate.>
    Do I just wait for it to finish & then scoot that copy folder over there?
    Thanks!

  • Can iPhoto and Lightroom share the same master file?

    I have loaded all my images into iPhoto. Lightroom cannot see the files until I made alias folders and placed them in Pictures. Now lightroom can see them. Lightroom is non destructive and should not damage the masters. Is that the same for iPhoto? Any problems in sharing the same master file?

    I have 20k images that take up 100G. Eighty percent are JPEG and have already been edited. iPhoto seems ideal for this group. Kids and grandkids like to go down memory lane and this seems to be easy to navigate. The remaining 20% are mostly raw files and need editing. I already have Lightroom and had been using it in my old PC. I am new to modern Mac’s having changed over to PC from Mac 10 years ago. I loaded all my photo files to iPhoto not knowing that the master file was hidden.
    Lightroom is a great editor. Almost all the advanced photographers in our club use Lightroom for 90% of their images. Ten % require layer capability so they use Photoshop CS5 or Elements. By the way there is now a layer plug in for Lightroom that works pretty well.
    The work flow I envision, if possible, would be to enter new raw images into Lightroom and edit. The master raw images could go anywhere. Could they reside in the iPhoto master file? The export would be jpeg to iPhoto. For existing images I would use the iPhoto master list to import the 20% group to Lightroom. You don’t really import the images but borrow the image. The masters are never altered. When you export an edited jpeg, the master stays unaltered in it’s original file. Does iPhoto operate the same way.
    I read where Lightroom jpeg images cause a problem for iPhoto. Still a problem?

Maybe you are looking for

  • The Bug about 'DB_SECONDARY_BAD' still exists in BerkeleyDB4.8!

    The Bug about 'DB_SECONDARY_BAD' still exists in BerkeleyDB4.8? I'm sorry for my poor English, But I just cannot find anywhere else for help. Thanks for your patience first! I'm using BDB4.8 C++ API on Ubuntu 10.04, Linux Kernel 2.6.32-24-generic $un

  • Tax code in T.code F-02 is optional

    Hi, I want to make tax code as optional in T.code F-02. In FS00 i have clicked posting with tax code is allowed. I checked the Field Status Group. Still i am not able to make tax code as optional. Is there any where thro SD Module where i can control

  • Add field to item position overview of Purchase Order

    Dear SRM gurus, I'm working on a change request of a customer. They want to add a field to the item overview position of Purchase Orders. They are using SRM 4.0 in Extended Classic Scenario. When displaying the list of Purchase Orders only the header

  • PSE 10 both Organizer and Editor crash on multi-core hardware; set affinity to single cpu mode fixes

    As I have noted in thread http://forums.adobe.com/thread/941128 I have found that both the editor and the organizer for PSE 10 crash in a multi core environment, I am running WIndows 64 bit, latest updates (includes sp1), I had the same problems with

  • Multiple instances of CL_GUI_TIMER on one screen

    Hello. I need to display ALV_GRID which will self refresh. I have a problem with CL_GUI_TIMER class. The smallest interval between its execution can be set to 1 second. For my purposes unfortunately i need interval less then that. Something around 0.