IPhoto Modified Folder

When I edit a picture in an event in iPhoto, such as cropping a large photo to a smaller one, I save it with another name. However, when I open iPhoto and go to the event, only the original is still there. How do I conjure up the smaller one to print. Also, I think there is a Modified folder somewhere. How do I find that?

Using Photoshop (or Photoshop Elements) as Your Editor of Choice in iPhoto.
1 - select Photoshop as your editor of choice in iPhoto's General Preference Section's under the "Edit photo:" menu.
2 - double click on the thumbnail in iPhoto to open it in Photoshop. When you're finished editing click on the Save button. If you immediately get the JPEG Options window make your selection (Baseline standard seems to be the most compatible jpeg format) and click on the OK button. Your done.
3 - however, if you get the navigation window that indicates that PS wants to save it as a PS formatted file. You'll need to either select JPEG from the menu and save (top image) or click on the desktop in the Navigation window (bottom image) and save it to the desktop for importing as a new photo.
This method will let iPhoto know that the photo has been editied and will update the thumbnail file to reflect the edit..
NOTE: With Photoshop Elements 6 the Saving File preferences should be configured: "On First Save: Save Over Current File". Also I suggest the Maximize PSD File Compatabilty be set to Always.
If you want to use both iPhoto's editing mode and PS without having to go back and forth to the Preference pane, once you've selected PS as your editor of choice, reset the Preferences back to "Open in main window". That will let you either edit in iPhoto (double click on the thumbnail) or in PS (Control-click on the thumbnail and seledt "Edit in external editor" in the Contextual menu). This way you get the best of both worlds
2 - double click on the thumbnail in iPhoto to open it in Photoshop. When you're finished editing click on the Save button. If you immediately get the JPEG Options window make your selection (Baseline standard seems to be the most compatible jpeg format) and click on the OK button. Your done.
3 - however, if you get the navigation window that indicates that PS wants to save it as a PS formatted file. You'll need to either select JPEG from the menu and save (top image) or click on the desktop in the Navigation window (bottom image) and save it to the desktop for importing as a new photo.
This method will let iPhoto know that the photo has been editied and will update the thumbnail file to reflect the edit..
TIP: For insurance against the iPhoto database corruption that many users have experienced I recommend making a backup copy of the Library6.iPhoto (iPhoto.Library for iPhoto 5 and earlier) database file and keep it current. If problems crop up where iPhoto suddenly can't see any photos or thinks there are no photos in the library, replacing the working Library6.iPhoto file with the backup will often get the library back. By keeping it current I mean backup after each import and/or any serious editing or work on books, slideshows, calendars, cards, etc. That insures that if a problem pops up and you do need to replace the database file, you'll retain all those efforts. It doesn't take long to make the backup and it's good insurance.
I've created an Automator workflow application (requires Tiger), iPhoto dB File Backup, that will copy the selected Library6.iPhoto file from your iPhoto Library folder to the Pictures folder, replacing any previous version of it. It's compatible with iPhoto 6 and 7 libraries and Tiger and Leopard. iPhoto does not have to be closed to run the application, just idle. You can download it at Toad's Cellar. Be sure to read the Read Me pdf file.

Similar Messages

  • IPhoto Modified Folder Issue

    I am having issues understanding why some of my photos are showing up in the Modified folder of my iPhoto library. I understand that when you edit a photo, iPhoto copies the new edited version into the "Modified" folder. However, I haven't edited any of the photos that have been copied into the folder. I have only imported and viewed my pictures.
    I've even reverted "edited" photos back to their originals. The copies in "Modified" are momentarily deleted, however, as soon as I open a picture, they are immediately copied again. Going back to iPhoto, when I right click the photo, once again the option "revert to original" is present.
    This only seems to be happening for photos which I took with my iPhone and imported.
    Has anyone else had a problem with this? Anybody have any ideas of what is causing the problem, how to fix it, or anything else I should investigate?
    Thanks

    In a little more detail:
    Your camera has an Auto-Rotate feature. However, the camera does not actually rotate any pixels in the file, but instead flags it with an instruction: "Display me this way". No photo app with editing can respect this flag, so iPhoto, seeing the flag, reads the intention and creates a modified version. If you then try to Revert to Original, iPhoto will remove the edited version. However, when it then looks at the Original file again, it sees the flag, and creates a new rotated version. This loop will run as long as you Revert to the Original. The solution is to either a: turn off the Auto-Rotate feature on your camera or b: rotate the photos prior to importing them to iPhoto.
    Regards
    TD

  • Cannot locate Modified folder.

    I recently bought a new iMAC and have imported my photos I stored on my portable hard drive. It seems the Modified folder was present at first but now I cannot locate it on the side bar with the Library, Recent, and Albums lists. To complicate things, I installed Photoshop 8 and tried to make some basic edits, just to try to learn how everything works.
    I saved a few photos as new files (new names) but they did not show up on iPhoto. When I tried to import them, a message came up saying they were already in the iPhoto Modified folder. Anyone have any idea what is going on?
    Thanks.

    Primary rule - NEVER make any changes of any sort to the contents or structure of the iPhoto library
    Secondary rule - there is no reason to ever directly access the contents of the iPhoto library
    iPhoto is a relational database and it must totally control its data - all access and changes must be done using iPhoto
    click here for a discussion on correctly and safely accessing your photos.
    To use Photoshop as an editor set it as the external editor in the iPhoto preferences - now editing a photo will properly send it to PS and saving is in PS (Not save as) will properly return it to iPhoto and properly update the database records
    right clicking (control clicking) on a photo will allow you to choose PS or iPhoto as the editor
    LN

  • IPhoto keeps on generating photos in "modified" folder

    Hi,
    I'm really frustrated with how iPhoto duplicates edited photos. Therefore, I don't really do any editing in iPhoto anymore. However, the "modified" folder still has copies of photos I never edited. I select those photos in iPhoto and choose "revert to original". the photos in the modfied folder disappear for a while... but they are just regenerated after a few seconds! I've tried deleting the photos in the modified folder through the Finder, but the same thing happens. For some reason, iPhoto keeps on creating "modified" photos. To my knowledge, thats only supposed to happen when I edit in iPhoto. But again, no editing whatsoever has been done.
    Do help!

    Enzo2121
    Welcome to the Apple Discussions.
    But again, no editing whatsoever has been done.
    Actually there has.
    Your camera has an auto-rotate feature. This feature flags the photo with an instruction "Display Me This Way Up". The file is not changed, no actual pixels get turned. No application with editing capabilities respects these flags. iPhoto sees the flag and reads it as an instruction: Rotate Me. Rotation is an edit, hence the modified version.
    When you try Revert to Original, iPhoto destroys the Modified version and reads the Original again. Of course the Original has this flag put there by the camera, iPhoto sees the flag and creates a new modified version. So you have a loop.
    Solution: 1. Turn off auto-rotate on your camera or 2. Rotate the pics with another app before importing them. Make sure that the app you chooses actually rotates pixels.
    I've tried deleting the photos in the modified folder through the Finder,
    *It is strongly advised that you do not move, change or in anyway alter things in the iPhoto Library Folder as this can cause the application to fail and even lead to data loss*
    I'm really frustrated with how iPhoto duplicates edited photos. Therefore, I don't really do any editing in iPhoto anymore.
    Any photo you edit via iPhoto also has a preserved original. If you don't edit via iPhoto, then iPhoto won't know about the edits, and your thumbnails will not reflect the reality of the photo. If you don't want this feature, bluntly, you'll be better off not using iPhoto. There are other photo organisers out there. Search on MacUpdate.
    Regards
    TD

  • Simple, non-bloated usage of iPhoto- no "modified" folder, etc, etc wanted

    Apologies if this has all been asked and answered. Searched a little and couldn't quite find the answers I'm seeking.
    I've resisted using iPhoto for years, it never seemed to do what I want. Just bought a new iMac with the newer version of iPhoto, so I want to try it.
    I have a lot (tens of thousands) of canon .raw images on an external HDD, organized into folders according to time and place shot, etc. I intend to keep them that way (external, and organized as they are). I need a photo organizer that will allow me to quickly see thumbnails of all or any of the photos, organized into whatever classes or groups that I want, with the ability to add and edit tags (date, place, people, etc), and perhaps be able to do simple image tweeking, resizing and printing. Sounds like iPhoto, so I just did a test run by importing a folder of raw images, and set preferences so that it didn't import the master file. Once all of the thumbnails were generated, I selected all, and hit the "play" button, assuming that it was a slideshow, to preview the images. I thought it would quickly make some temporary jpgs for the slideshow, then delete them when I quit. So far so good, but I looked into the "Pictures" directory in my user directory, and I see that 3 new directories were created, under the library called "test" that I created. One is "Data", the second is "Modified", and the third, "Originals". "Data" contains small .jpg thumbnails of all of the photos, at 30 or 40k each. "Originals" also contains all of the file names, same structure, but listed as shortcuts to the originals, also very small at about 4k each, but then there's the "Modified" folder, with 1 to 1.5 MEG files of all of the photos.
    I understand the shortcuts and thumbnails, but why the "modified" folder? Is that from the slideshow? Seems that if I decide to process and create a picture, I should have the option of creating jpgs or tifs, and storing them where I wish. What's the point of all of those 1.5Meg files, slowing things down, and taking up space on the hard drive? Don't want them, don't need them. How do I avoid them? Does Aperture make similar 1 meg+ files of all images? I really don't want to spend that money on a cataloging program, but for sure I don't want all of those files needlessly created. Any settings in iPhoto that I'm not seeing to avoid having the "Modified" folder and images created?
    thanks much!
    PoserBook AL G4 1.25G 1.5RAM iMac 24 2.33 7600 2RAM   Mac OS X (10.4.8)  

    RS:
    Welcome to the Apple Discussions. The modified files are the jpg conversions of the RAW files. RAW files are like negatives and are never touched in the editing process, even by professional applications. If you shoot RAW then there's no way to avoid having the modified, jpg version of it in iPhoto. Aperture covers the RAW to either tiff or jpg to use. RAW files cannot be edited it it's natural form. It's just the nature of the beast and game.
    When you're dealing with RAW then you've committed yourself to using lots of HD space. Unless you're a professional or doing very advanced amateur work, RAW tends to be a little overkill. IMO, it's just the buzz in the photographic industry right now and intended for pros.
    Do you Twango?
    TIP: For insurance against the iPhoto database corruption that many users have experienced I recommend making a backup copy of the Library6.iPhoto database file and keep it current. If problems crop up where iPhoto suddenly can't see any photos or thinks there are no photos in the library, replacing the working Library6.iPhoto file with the backup will often get the library back. By keeping it current I mean backup after each import and/or any serious editing or work on books, slideshows, calendars, cards, etc. That insures that if a problem pops up and you do need to replace the database file, you'll retain all those efforts. It doesn't take long to make the backup and it's good insurance.
    I've written an Automator workflow application (requires Tiger), iPhoto dB File Backup, that will copy the selected Library6.iPhoto file from your iPhoto Library folder to the Pictures folder, replacing any previous version of it. You can download it at Toad's Cellar. Be sure to read the Read Me pdf file.

  • IPhoto copying unedited pictures into modified folder!

    Hi everybody!
    recently I've noticed the size of my iPhoto library growing without me adding any photos, so I checked the folders and discovered that whole events had been copied into the modified folder without me even having edited them!
    I marked all those pictures and clicked on "back to original", but when I checked the modified folder again, I could watch while the same pictured were being copied in there again!!
    Does anyone else have this problem and if yes, how can it be stopped?
    Thanks in advance,
    Phil

    First try deleting the iPhoto preference file, com.apple.iPhoto.plist, that resides in your User/Library/Preferences folder. Launch iPhoto and try importing again.
    NOTE: If you're moved your library from its default location in your Home/Pictures folder you will have to point iPhoto to its new location when you next open iPhoto by holding the the Option key. You'll also have to reset the iPhoto's various preferences.
    Next, if necessary, log into another user account on your Mac, launch iPhoto and import some test images to see if the situation is repeated. If so then a reinstall of iPhoto is warranted. To do so you'll have to first delete the current application and all files with "iPhoto" in the file name with either a .PKG or .BOM extension that reside in the HD/Library/Receipts folder, reinstall iPhoto from the disk it came on and reapply the latest updaters.
    OT

  • Backing Up:  Full iPhoto Fill/Folder or just Original & Modified files?

    If you're backing up to a server and you have unlimited storage space - would you:
    a.)  Copy your entire iPhoto Library file (which copies as an iPhoto Library Folder) with ALL of the Package Contents?
    - OR -
    b.)  Just copy over the Originals & Modified Folders?
    Are there any reasons why I'd absolutely want to do one over the other?
    Am I right when I assume all you'd need to do to "get your photos and videos back" (if there was a crash) or move them onto a new computer - would be to click and drag the Original & Modified Folders back into iPhoto?  (I have heard if you want to keep them organized instead of dragging the whole folders in - you could go into the folders and drag their contents/subfolders....True?)
    Thank you in advance for everyone's help!

    Examples of such apps: Chronosync or DejaVu . But are many others. Search on MacUpdate

  • IPhoto and the Modified Folder

    Hello,
    I do NOT modify any of original pictures and yet I have a whoppingly large (52 gb!) modified folder. I do use iPhoto to upload my pictures onto my facebook. Is iPhoto modifying the originals and uploading it into facebook, and thus creating items into my modified folder? Since it's so large of a file, I'd like to deleted the modified folder, but I don't want to lose said photos on Facebook. If I deleted it, would anything happen to my Facebook photos that I uploaded? I am using iPhoto '09 8.1.2 (424) and OS 10.6.8
    Thanks!

    Usual reasons for unexpected images in the Modifieds folder include:
    1. You're importing Raws. Iphoto creates a Jpeg preview of each Raw on import.
    2. You're importing Jpegs with Exif tags such as Auto-Rotate. A camera does not actually rotate any pixels in the file, but instead flags it with an instruction: "Display me this way". This is a tag in the Exif metadata.  When you import a file with this tag iPhoto creates a modified version. It does this because most of the apps that integrate with it -  email clients, word processors etc - simply don't understand this Exif tag. So if you used the shot in a word processing doc, uploaded it to many Web site etc, the shot would come out sideways.
    And 
    I've actually done it before. I moved my originals folder somewhere else and nothing happened to my library.
    If you did that then your library is a mess and that may be part of the issue - you simply can not change the contents of the library withou causin gissues
    LN

  • Unable to find Iphoto library folder

    I have been trying to attach photos from my gmail account, but after I browse for the iphoto library folder I'm unable to see my original and modified photos folders.
    Can anyone advice how to solve!
    Many thanks in advance
    Raul

    This is by far the most ask question - you would have had to look back at least ten posts to find the answer
    look here for the complete discussion --- http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=1178149&tstart=15
    For g-mail specify go to you g-mail preferences and allow POP 3 access to your account and set the g-mail account up in Apple mail - then you can select photo(s) in iPhoto, click on mail and have a new e-mail created in Apple mail which you send via G-Mail
    Larry Nebel

  • What to do with a psd image in Modified folder that I can't see.

    With an original jpeg image I modified the image in PSE (which is set as default editor in iPhoto) using layers. I did a Save. The psd is in my modified folder but is not displayed by iPhoto. I understand that I should have used a Save As (eg to desktop) and imported that image back to iPhoto.
    Is it OK to move the psd image out of the Modified folder to desktop and then import it back into iPhoto? Thanks,
    Owen

    Owen
    Yes.
    Regards
    TD

  • IPhoto 09 folder structure bug

    Let me start by saying that I am a big Apple fan. I have a Macbook Pro (end 2006) running 10.6 with a 30 inch Cinema Display, a 23 inch iMac (mid 2007), and an iPhone 3G and a Nano 5th G. I am an Apple Certified Systems Administrator and was also the first person in Japan to be certified on OS X 10.5 as an Apple Certified Support Professional, however I am primarily an Windows Active Directory/Exchange Server engineer.
    I have been using iPhoto since version 06 (end of 2006). I upgraded to 08 as soon as it was released then last year I upgraded to 09. Until recently I had about 18,000 photos in my iPhoto library, but due to the issue listed below I have now switched to Windows Live Photo Gallery on Windows 7 for managing my photos (these are synced using Windows Live Sync to my Mac's Photo folder where I then use Picasa for Mac. Sounds complicated but actually not and it means I can import my photos on my Mac or PC and they are synced both ways. Anyway...
    I posted the following Bug Report to: http://www.apple.com/feedback/iphoto.html
    If you use iPhoto and don't want to spend days/weeks fixing your folder names and reorganizing photos into correct folders if your library becomes corrupt or you ever want to move your photos out of iPhoto then please provide feedback to Apple so that they know that we are not happy about this.
    Bug Report.
    The problem with iPhoto 09 is that the the folder structure inside the iPhoto Library package no longer matches the event names in iPhoto.
    Previously in iPhoto 08, when renaming an event in iPhoto the folder structure would also be updated. Additionally splitting or merging events would move the files in the iPhoto Library package's folder structure. This is a major problem for me and many other users on the Apple.com iPhoto 09 discussion forums, and this issue has existed since the beginning of 2009!
    I need my photo's folders named correctly for the following reasons:
    1). Incase I should ever need to move photos out of iPhoto and to another application or platform, I would' have to spend days or even weeks renaming all the folders.
    2). If my iPhoto library ever become corrupt and I needed to recreate it then I would loose ALL my event names (hence the details) if iPhoto doesn't keep the folder names the same as the events.
    I have recently spent many hours migrating my photos out of iPhoto and renaming the folders manually. iPhoto really was all I ever needed in a photo management application but with this underling bug/issue I can't trust all my photos to it's library format of storage, but I do hope this gets fixed so that I can migrate back to iPhoto in the near future. Might I suggest that the best way forward for the future would be change iPhoto so that it can monitor folders (the same way Picasa does so, this is open and then gives customers the choice of using multiple apps for accessing their photos).
    Regards,
    Andrew

    A bug can be an error or fault in the software but it can also be a design flaw which IMO this is.
    No it can't. A design flaw is just that. A bug is when the software fails to works as designed. iPhoto is working as designed. You may prefer it work another way, but that's your preference. Remember you can always use a different product for managing your photos. You're not required to use iPhoto, you know.
    Exporting dumps all the photos into a single folder which again doesn't solve either points 1 or 2 that I made.
    Yes - if you export the entire Library at once.
    If, however, you export each Event in turn (an process that can be automated with either Automator or AppleScript) then it will export to appropriately named folders.
    And, as to any issue of corruption, the simple fact is that backing up is the ultimate protection.
    What you want will possibly preserve your Event names. But that's all. It won't preserve albums, slideshows, metadata, the relationship between original and modified versions, the non-destructive editing and so on and so forth. All you'll get will be some folder names.
    Now that's both your points answered. For the second time.
    I'm not sure why there are so many Apple apologists on these forums.
    I see, so someone who explains to you that you have misunderstood something, explains to you a better way of doing what you want to do is an "apologist"? Just like your definition of "bug" it's a mite idiosyncratic. And rude.
    I am pretty sure that at some point there will be many users who will want to migrate out of iPhoto and when they do they won't be very happy when they realize that they are locked in.
    Nobody, I repeat nobody, is locked into iPhoto. That statement is a falsehood. File -> Export and off you go.
    we can either sit back and just accept these limitations, anti-competative vender lockins and design flaws or we can voice our concerns to Apple and get things changed for the better of everyone.
    Every software has limitations. What you have failed to show is that any of the matters that concern you are actually "limitations". There are no
    anti-competative (sic) vender (sic) lockins (sic)
    iPhoto works with entirely standard formats. All your files and metadata are easily accessible throughout the OS and can be easily exported.
    Regards
    TD

  • Raw auto conversion & showing items in modified folder

    Hi,
    When I shoot photo's, I let my camera create RAW and JPEG images. I manage to import those into iPhoto and show up nicely in the (event) viewer. I understand that iPhoto puts these into the original folder and while I'm also importing a RAW image, it also auto converts a JPEG copy and puts it into the modified folder.
    So far so good. However, when I need to modify a photo I normally use the RAW image file. What I would expect to happen after the RAW image modification is that :
    1)iPhoto makes an auto conversion and puts it in the modified folder (this happen and I find the modified JPEG in this folder)
    2)The original JPEG photo that is shown in the event viewer is "overlayed" with the modified one. I tried a lots of things till now but nothing seems to help?
    Does anyone know how to accomplish 2)??
    Further when I remove an event from the library (move to trash in viewer) I noticed the Photo files remain in the library package. It is possible to let iPhoto also remove the files from the library?
    Can I let iPhoto create (rebuild) a blank iPhoto library package, i.e. after I renamed the active one ( I want to create one for each year)?
    Thanks for your help

    MacFan_RJ:
    Welcome to the Apple Discussions. Regarding removing the files, are you emptying the iPhoto trash bin after moving the photo into it?
    Launch iPhoto with the Option key depressed and, when asked, select the option to create a new library. If you play on having multiple libraries I suggest you use iPhoto Library Manager to manage them and allow you to easily move between them. I have 18 libraries that I manage. With the paid version of iPLM you can copy events or album between libraries while maintaining keywords, comments and titles.
    On editing RAW and saving the new jpg, I've not found a way to get the new edited version into the correct Modified folder, replace the current modified file and update the thumbnail to reflect the edit. It appears that those edits will have to be saved to the desktop and imported a new files.
    TIP: For insurance against the iPhoto database corruption that many users have experienced I recommend making a backup copy of the Library6.iPhoto database file and keep it current. If problems crop up where iPhoto suddenly can't see any photos or thinks there are no photos in the library, replacing the working Library6.iPhoto file with the backup will often get the library back. By keeping it current I mean backup after each import and/or any serious editing or work on books, slideshows, calendars, cards, etc. That insures that if a problem pops up and you do need to replace the database file, you'll retain all those efforts. It doesn't take long to make the backup and it's good insurance.
    I've created an Automator workflow application (requires Tiger), iPhoto dB File Backup, that will copy the selected Library6.iPhoto file from your iPhoto Library folder to the Pictures folder, replacing any previous version of it. It's compatible with iPhoto 08 libraries and Leopard. iPhoto does not have to be closed to run the application, just idle. You can download it at Toad's Cellar. Be sure to read the Read Me pdf file.

  • 140MB of photos in "modified" folder, but didn't modify any of them?

    I just recently upgraded to '09. I uploaded my first batch of photos the other day. It was a lot, about 1.4GB from a trip I took. I happened to be looking in the package contents for something else, but stumbled up the modified folder for the photos I had just uploaded. I had looked at them in iPhoto but had not adjusted any...not one. In fact, I don't typically edit in iPhoto, but rather in Photoshop. Anyway, the modified folder that coincides with the originals folder has 143MB worth of photos! Why? I didn't modify a single one? Projecting into the future, if this sort of behavior continues, I'll quickly start gobbling up HD space for what is, from what I can tell, no reason. Why on earth would I have 143MB's of modified photo when I hadn't modified a single one? Any clue how/why this would happen?

    Yes. It's best, IMO, to upload from the camera to a folder on the Desktop where you can preview and losslessly rotate those photos needing it with the free applicationXee before importing the folder into iPhoto.
    If you name the folder to identify the shoot the resulting Event in iPhoto will have the same name. This workflow will also give you the opportunity to sequentially batch rename the files to something more informative than IMG_XXX with an application likeName Mangler. I use the international date format and a brief description like this: 2009-09-06-Labor Day-001.jpg.

  • IPhoto Library folder "Missing" in 08 version???

    So, I'm using the new "Sharing" feature in Leopard's Finder to share files between my iMac and my MacBook over my wireless network. This seems to be working fine for my documents and even my iTunes music. My only problem is I can't locate the iPhoto Library folder so I can share pictures. Didn't iPhoto 6 have a library folder that you could access your originals and modified pictures? Are we supposed to rely on the sharing feature in iPhoto? If so, that stinks because iPhoto would have to be open on both machines.
    Much appreciate any insight anyone can give.

    grea55
    Are we supposed to rely on the sharing feature in iPhoto?
    Yes.
    Maybe something here might help:
    There are three ways (at least) to get files from the iPhoto Window.
    1. *Drag and Drop*: Drag a photo from the iPhoto Window to the desktop, there iPhoto will make a full-sized copy of the pic.
    2. *File -> Export*: Select the files in the iPhoto Window and go File -> Export. The dialogue will give you various options, including altering the format, naming the files and changing the size. Again, producing a copy.
    3. *Show File*: Right- (or Control-) Click on a pic and in the resulting dialogue choose 'Show File'. A Finder window will pop open with the file already selected.
    To upload to MySpace or any site that does not have an iPhoto Export Plug-in the recommended way is to Select the Pic in the iPhoto Window and go File -> Export and export the pic to the desktop, then upload from there. After the upload you can trash the pic on the desktop. It's only a copy and your original is safe in iPhoto.
    This is also true for emailing with Web-based services. If you're using Gmail you can use THIS
    If you use Apple's Mail, Entourage, AOL or Eudora you can email from within iPhoto.
    If you use a Cocoa-based Browser such as Safari, you can drag the pics from the iPhoto Window to the Attach window in the browser. Or, if you want to access the files with iPhoto not running, then create a Media Browser using Automator (takes about 10 seconds) or use THIS
    The change was made to the format of the iPhoto library because many users were inadvertently corrupting their library by browsing through it with other software or making changes in it themselves. If you're willing to risk database corruption, you can restore the older functionality simply by right clicking on the iPhoto Library and choosing 'Show Package Contents'. Then simply make an alias to the folders you require and put that alias on the desktop or where ever you want it. Be aware though, that this is a hack and not supported by Apple.
    Regards
    TD

  • Redundant duplicates in Modified folder

    Hello all,
    I've recently started using iPhoto (ver. 6) primarily for its entry-level editing options and as a nice way to see all my photos in central location whilst retaining search and categorisation functions.
    I keep all my media on a partition of the hard drive so its all accessible from osx or xp (I have to use windows quite often) and I usually download photos into monthly folders which I've manually imported to the iPhoto library (copies box unchecked, of course).
    One problem I'm encountering is that duplicates of the original photos are being made in the 'modified' folder in the users/pictures/iphoto directory, even though these images are exactly the same as the originals. I've read that iPhoto will do this for camera auto-rotated images, but it only seems to do this for some. I have no idea how/why it's making the distinction between duplicating or not. Additional subfolders are also being created every time I import, eg there's a December, December_2, etc in both the originals and modified folders.
    Using the 'revert to original' function doesn't seem to do anything, as the file association is exactly the same before or after. If the original file were used I could go back and manually delete these extraneous folders (against the advice of not touching anything!)
    This may seem pretty trivial, but having so many duplicates just wasting space and having an app that I don't know what it's going to do or be able to set up to function the way I need it to is not terribly useful to me.
    Thanks for reading this post - sorry it's kinda long...

    Welcome to the Apple Discussions. As Terence already pointed out if the file has the rotate tag administered by the camera it will have a modified version created that's rotated. To avoid this you can use the free contextual menu application PhotoTool CM or the free editor Xee to losslessly rotate those portrait file before importing into iPhoto.
    TIP: For insurance against the iPhoto database corruption that many users have experienced I recommend making a backup copy of the Library6.iPhoto (iPhoto.Library for iPhoto 5 and earlier) database file and keep it current. If problems crop up where iPhoto suddenly can't see any photos or thinks there are no photos in the library, replacing the working Library6.iPhoto file with the backup will often get the library back. By keeping it current I mean backup after each import and/or any serious editing or work on books, slideshows, calendars, cards, etc. That insures that if a problem pops up and you do need to replace the database file, you'll retain all those efforts. It doesn't take long to make the backup and it's good insurance.
    I've created an Automator workflow application (requires Tiger or later), iPhoto dB File Backup, that will copy the selected Library6.iPhoto file from your iPhoto Library folder to the Pictures folder, replacing any previous version of it. It's compatible with iPhoto 6 and 7 libraries and Tiger and Leopard. Just put the application in the Dock and click on it whenever you want to backup the dB file. iPhoto does not have to be closed to run the application, just idle. You can download it at Toad's Cellar. Be sure to read the Read Me pdf file.
    Note: There's now an Automator backup application for iPhoto 5 that will work with Tiger or Leopard.

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