![]() Do you want to merge these events? Merge. For simplicity’s sake, I’m going to merge these two together so I have just one event. I’m going to drag these two files, images labeled “3” and “4” into iPhoto.Īnd now you can see these two photos were added to a separate event. I’m going to close this out and then go to these two images I have in a USB thumb drive I have connected to my computer. So let me show you how the second way of importing would work. It’s still on your property but they’re not being protected inside of your locked house. So then what would happen if we uncheck this little box? Think of it like storing some of your books or your furnishings or your jewelry outside on your front lawn. So inside of this iPhoto Library, it’s protecting your images for you. It knows that the average user doesn’t want to be responsible for the storage of all their photos. If we go back in the iPhoto and the preferences under the Advanced tab, you will see that under Importing, there’s a check mark next to “Copy items to the iPhoto Library.”Īnd the reason why this is the default import settings in iPhoto is because Apple wants to protect all of your images. And the reason why that happened was because of that very important setting that we talked about earlier. It’s now 16.6 megabytes and the reason for this is because these two photos were originally stored on my desktop and when we drug them into the iPhoto library, it copied them into the library. If we go back to the Finder application here on my main hard drive and click on the pictures folder that we were in before, you can see that the iPhoto Library is now larger. We have two photos inside of the library and for simplicity’s sake, I labeled them photo 1 and photo 2. You could see it says “importing” and there they are. I have two photos right here on my desktop that I’m going to bring in and the first way to bring them in is to highlight them and then click and drag them into the library. And because this is a new library, iPhoto gives you some help right here on how to bring in your first set of photos. In fact if I close this out, you will see how new this is because I have zero events and zero photos in this library. And you can see it’s a really small 7.5 megabytes in size. Now this just happens to be a brand new iPhoto Library that I just created. And typically this is stored in your pictures folder in your user settings.Ĭlick right here in the Finder application. And then the second thing is the iPhoto Library file, and this is the house that I spoke of. If I go into my application folder, and my user settings and scroll down, you will see the application right here. The first thing is the application itself. Now iPhoto is made up of two separate things. And where do you keep these things? You keep them in your house. I like to think of a photo manager like a house. ![]() It was built to hold and protect all of your important images. I’m Curtis Bisel from Scan Your Entire Life and the reason why this is the most important thing is because iPhoto is a non-destructive photo manager. I believe that the most important thing that everyone who uses iPhoto should know is where and how iPhoto stores all of your images and this is all controlled by one tiny little setting right here in the iPhoto preferences called “Copy items to the iPhoto Library”. (If for no other reason than it took me a long time to edit it! ) So if you use iPhoto, please check out this short 6-minute video. You aren't forced to keep all your photos inside of iPhoto if you don't want to. When activated, it will enable you to keep your photos stored on your hard drive or Solid State Drive in any place you would like. Like its big brother Aperture, iPhoto has a rarely talked about feature. I also included a little bit of “advanced” information that many of you long-time iPhoto users may not even know. This is the foundation of how iPhoto works. In fact, it's so important that I decided to put together a nice little tutorial video explaining these basics. I can't think of anything that should be more important to an iPhoto user than knowing where they are really saved. You just honestly haven't really seen them with your own eyes in a long time. I mean, you know they're stuffed in there somewhere. If you're an iPhoto user, have you ever wondered to yourself where your original photo files are actually stored on your computer?
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