Posted by David Peterson on 14 Jan 2007 as Image Files, Tips
With the popularity of digital cameras these days, more and more photos are in the digital format. In fact, because it costs to little to take photos, we usually end up taking thousands of them.
So how do you organize your photos so that you can easily find photos later (even years) afterwards?
In my opinion, Google Picasa is the best way to organize your photos. It’s free and is a fantastic program for organization and simple image editing. Get it by clicking on the image on the right.
Picasa will find all your photos on your computer, automatically sort them in a timeline (although you can manually sort into Albums later), and allow you to view and sort them easily. It will download your photos from your camera and has some terrific extra features like showing a slideshow (in a much better way than the standard Windows slideshow), creating a Gift CD of your images, and even sharing your photos by uploading to the web.
Best of all, it’s very easy to use and you don’t need to be a computer genius to organize your images.
If you use Photoshop Elements, this program has a great Photo Browser feature that will import your photos from your camera and help you organize them into folders. Photoshop CS2 has an excellent image organizer, although it’s not as easy to use as Elements.
You can sort your photos into “Collections”, or “Tag” them for easy retrieval later. I use tagging and the ability to assign stars to my fave images so I can later on create slideshows of just my best images for particular topics.
If you prefer to organize your photos yourself, you can create a folder structure on your computer. When uploading new images, move into the correct folder. The first level of folders is for the year, and then each month and the event name.
It’s really simple to implement, doesn’t need any extra programs, and is particularly handy to find your images from, say, Uncle Ted’s birthday party 2 years ago.
First create the year folders in my “My Pictures” folder (under Windows XP), however, you can place them anywhere on your computer.
When transferring new images from your digital camera, create a new folder for the images. In Windows XP, when I plug in my memory card, I get a prompt from which I can select the “Copy pictures to a folder on my computer using Microsoft Scanner and Camera Wizard” option. Windows Vista has a similar option. I then follow the prompts, select the year and create a new folder for this set of images.
I name the folder using the month as the first two numbers of the folder name (01 for January, 02 for February etc) and the event as the rest of the name.
Then when I want to find my photos, I simply look at the correct year and folder name.
My free video series, Image Editing Tips, shows you how to use Picasa to fix the most common problems with digital photos.
20 Responses
Bruce
January 18th, 2007 at 11:14 pm
1Now there’s a useful tip. I’ve been using file folder storage for years, but never thought of adding a numeric key at the beginning.
I also make two back up copies of each directory on CD/DVD in case of failure. One copy is stored offsite (a friend or family member will do for offsite storage).
Peter
January 18th, 2007 at 11:59 pm
2I love Picasa and have used it for over a year. However its main drawback for me is that once you archive photos to cd/dvd (which it does admirably) it does not keep a thumbnail or disc reference. It only works really well if you keep your photos on hard disc.
PCS
Nikki
January 19th, 2007 at 1:35 am
3Good morning!
Your photo organization tips are great — in fact, your system is almost identical to what I use in my job as a newspaper photographer. Organization is the backbone of photography. There are several photographers dumping photos into our system, and twice as many editors picking up those photos, so it’s in good order to stay in order.
Adding to that tip, I would recommend that folks burn their images to a disc for a back-up copy. The pain of losing an award-winning photo, or Grandma’s last birthday is very real. Utilize the folders on the computer for everday use, but keep the discs for organization that lasts.
By the way, I wanted to let you know how much I appreciate your free tips. I teach an adult education photography class, and your tips guide my lesson plans. Thanks for everything!
Caspar Radden
January 19th, 2007 at 6:49 am
4Your organizing hints are great thank you.
But I just learned that Microsoft’s new XP Media Center does not allow to pick random pictures in MY PICTURES anymore, a big set back for all photographers! Instead if you try to do that as usually in XP you will get unwanted hundreds of sets of copies and a big mess. All my attempts with Microsoft, HP and Futureshop failed! I will not buy a Media Center again and may return this one, do you picture organizing guru’s have a similar experience with Media Center?
Try it out, it may work only for beginners with slow typing speed. Professionals are lost now with Media Center, which also does only allow one scanner at all!
Don’t we need better considerations?
Please send me your response, thank you
from snowy Canada
C.R.
Lee Horn
January 19th, 2007 at 7:58 am
5I have been using Photoshop Album for several years. I do not see a current download so do not know if it is still available
Steven Due
January 19th, 2007 at 8:16 am
6The best way I’ve found to organize photos is by year-month-day and Title, as in YYYYMMDD TITLE. With this format, all computers will sort the photos correctly by date. If multiple events were photographed, append an alpha character to the end of the date.
20070118a LetItSnow
20070118b CarWreck
Steven Due
Mohamed Wagih
January 19th, 2007 at 12:27 pm
7Hi Mr.David thanks tooooo much you always supplies us with new good advices software new tools and equipments which moderate , develop and make our foto the best one.
Best wishes
Linda Deacon
January 19th, 2007 at 3:16 pm
8I have been using adobe photoshop elements # 3 for 2 years and i like the photo organizer. When i down load my pictures off my memory card it goes directly to the organizer, when it is finished downloading I change the name of the file to the month I took the pictures the the day, and then the event . For examaple Aug 25 06 Nana’s birthday. Then when I go threw my pictures all I have to do is go the month and find the day and event, and open the file. Then I save the file to a CD>
Swapna
January 19th, 2007 at 3:24 pm
9I migrated to a Mac last year and am currently using iPhoto to store my pictures. But it does tend to create a bulky library and unfortunately there’s no Picasa version for Mac. Could you recommend another program or perhaps some tips to cut the flab from my photo library? Thanks!
DUNGA24
January 19th, 2007 at 6:17 pm
10Have been using MICROSOFT PHOTO STANDARD Version 9 for as long I have been using my Computer.
It lets you do all the elementary jobs , like cropping , improving levels,brightness , contrast and cropping and many other things.
Using Photoshop ,Arcsoft Photo Studio and Elementary for other serious things.
I store all photo’s on an outside Harddrive that holds many G’s.
Sorting is per Subject name with date for the files and then sorted into folders with other Subject names.
For example ; Mount Anan 17-1-07 001.jpg on the files .
All the files of that day go to folder LANDSCAPES in a subfolder Mount Anan.
That main FOLDER LANDSCAPES has about 30 different sub folders ,each with their own name of the area .
Bird photo’s are sorted in main folder BIRDS then in sub folders by Alphabet and date.
Photo’s of trips are going into a Main folder TRIPS and get a number followed by title and date.The first number keeps them in order of happening.
Some might be duplicated into Landscape folders.
Just remember where you went and you find the photo’s.
You are more likely to remember the place or occation than the date..
NSW 19-1-07
Henning
January 19th, 2007 at 7:55 pm
11I dont think sorting by date is such a hot idea. Often I dont really remember when a particular photo was shot, so I have nothing to search for. I use a program called cumulus, (came free with a magazine. That keeps a record of the pictures using categories of my choise, so I have portraits, family, cars and so on. Each picture can have several such tags.
But the most important thing to do is to file the images in some sort of structure, to just download from the camera and think: I´ll sort it later, is the start of chaos.
Henning
Venki
January 19th, 2007 at 8:21 pm
12What a simple yet brilliant idea !!
Stanley
January 19th, 2007 at 9:04 pm
13IPhoto on the Mac is a good application. It also stores by date and its Preferences allow for quite a range of automatically generated chronological folders. I’ve recently started using v.6 which is worth looking at. Better editing tools.
The way around the bulky library is to create more specific libraries. Hold the Option key down while booting up IPhoto and it will ask you whether you want to create a new library. To revert to a previous library, do the booting up thing again and you can choose which library to work in. It will otherwise simply open up in the last used library.
Trish
January 20th, 2007 at 3:06 am
14This was a great topic, however I have to disagree about Picasa. I have thousands of photos and this program didn’t even provide the option of making subfolders for organization; it just made folders and that’s it. I have gmail - which is great for organization of email messages; with that in mind, I thought a program by Google would be better than what I experienced.
I have found that organizing files on the hard drive is much easier.
Bruno
January 20th, 2007 at 7:07 am
15I agree with Trish, Picasa might make your Photo Collection look organised within the program but the file structure is a big mess… so not a good idea if you ever intend to change programs /systems (even if you can import the picasa library files) or want to make CD / DVD backups.
I sort my photos as described above in folders according to date and place/event, additionally I sometimes add keywords/tags into the exif/meta data of photos so I can find them without a date in mind, which makes it platform & program independent.
So no matter what computer system or online gallery I transfer my collection to, I preserve the same strategy. Using the exif/meta keywords you can sort your photos easily into date independent categories (i.e. the (picture) search for “beach” will bring up every photo you tagged with beach), works also for online galleries that understand exif (like the well known gallery script).
For viewing, searching, tagging, and further categorizing and even small editting tasks I use ACDSee (Pro), which also understands image audio, movie clips, and basically every picture format I ever heard of (plugins extensible).
Tormod Malmgren
January 20th, 2007 at 10:51 am
16I have also convert to mac and I have tried many of the programs and found that iphoto 6.0 is great for most of the job and you can combine it with photoshop. I also tried Adobe lightroom which is in public beta and is really the best I tried up til now
Barbara
January 21st, 2007 at 3:36 am
17I use the folder method of organizing, as you show, but I put the date to the event in each month. eg. 01-14-Uncle Ted’s bday, 01-26-Trip to Bahamas. All would be in 2007, 01JAN. I keep a paper book journal so I can find what I’m looking for by date or event.
I,also, copy all the original pics and put them on a CD so that I am working with the copies only.
Travis
January 21st, 2007 at 10:17 am
18Picasa works great with the latest update of folder tree viewing.
http://www.picasa.com
Another great feature is the uploading/sharing part of picasa. Check mine out and see for yourself.
http://www.picasaweb.google.com/tjsphotography
and the best part is it is all free.
FOR SEMI-PRO / PROSUMERS, if you want to shoot and edit RAW images, this program is amazing and free. And has a great work flow design. Adobe however just bought the program and will soon be ending the link. So check it out and download now if you have a DIGITAL SLR (I shoot a Nikon D70 w/ 18-70mm nikkor)
http://www.pixmantec.com/products/rawshooter_essentials.asp
John Davidson
February 7th, 2007 at 11:45 pm
19About your site in general.
I like your course and help. It’s like having a knowledgable friend and a club at hand. Jolly well done!
Dianne
June 11th, 2008 at 4:39 pm
20HI! LOve your site. I have got windows xp and am trying to orgainse my photos in my pictures. I need to ask how do I open a subfolder? I want to open folders for the different years and then move my file/folders there. can I do this now?
Thanks
Di
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