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New Participant
March 23, 2023
Answered

Add capture date stamp to photos (batch processing using exif data)

  • March 23, 2023
  • 1 reply
  • 4734 views

I would like to add a date stamp to my photos.  The date can be pulled from the exif data of the image.  It would be great if I could specify the location, font, color, size of the stamp (like a watermark), and do this as a batch operation on an entire collection of photos.

 

I understand that the plugin LR/Mogrify2 should do this - but I can not get this to work on my machine (I have an M1 macbook pro).

 

This seems like a feature that should be possible - I hope! Any help or tips would be great.

 

Thanks!

 

Running Adobe Lightroom Classic 12.2.1

MacBook Pro M1 Max with macOS 13.1

Correct answer johnrellis

[Updated for Mac OS 15]

 

The LR/Mogrify2 author stopped providing support years ago.  There are several steps needed to get it running on Macs:

 

1. Apple Silicon Macs: Install Apple Rosetta if it's not already installed:

https://derflounder.wordpress.com/2020/11/17/installing-rosetta-2-on-apple-silicon-macs/

 

2A. Mac OS 15 and later: 

a. In Finder navigate to the folder where you placed the plugin. 

b. Right-click LRMogrify2.lrplugin and do Show Package Contents.

c. Open the subfolder LRMogrify.extras.

d. Double-click the program "magick" and click Done when Mac OS warns you it's malware.

e. Go to System Settings > Privacy & Security and scroll to the bottom.

f. Where it says "magick" was blocked to protect your Mac, click Open Anyway.

g. Repeat steps c - f for the subfolder "exiftool" and the contained program "exiftool".

 

2B. All Macs on Mac OS 10.15 through Mac OS 14:

a. In Finder navigate to the folder where you placed the plugin.  

b. Right-click LRMogrify2.lrplugin and do Show Package Contents.

c. Open the subfolder LRMogrify.extras.

d. Hold down the Ctrl key, right-click "magick", and do Open.

e. Confirm when it asks if you really want to open it.

f. Close the Terminal window that appears (ignore what it contains).

 

Now run the plugin.

1 reply

Rob_Cullen
Community Expert
March 23, 2023

One suggestion, until you can get Mogrify to work- Use the Print Module with [Print to JPG File].

A defined combination of metadata can be added with 'Photo Info', but the limitation is- only to a border under the image (not as a watermark)

 

Regards. My System: Windows-11, Lightroom-Classic 15.0, Photoshop 27.0, ACR 18.0, Lightroom 9.0, Lr-iOS 10.4.0, Bridge 16.0 .
johnrellis
johnrellisCorrect answer
Brainiac
March 24, 2023

[Updated for Mac OS 15]

 

The LR/Mogrify2 author stopped providing support years ago.  There are several steps needed to get it running on Macs:

 

1. Apple Silicon Macs: Install Apple Rosetta if it's not already installed:

https://derflounder.wordpress.com/2020/11/17/installing-rosetta-2-on-apple-silicon-macs/

 

2A. Mac OS 15 and later: 

a. In Finder navigate to the folder where you placed the plugin. 

b. Right-click LRMogrify2.lrplugin and do Show Package Contents.

c. Open the subfolder LRMogrify.extras.

d. Double-click the program "magick" and click Done when Mac OS warns you it's malware.

e. Go to System Settings > Privacy & Security and scroll to the bottom.

f. Where it says "magick" was blocked to protect your Mac, click Open Anyway.

g. Repeat steps c - f for the subfolder "exiftool" and the contained program "exiftool".

 

2B. All Macs on Mac OS 10.15 through Mac OS 14:

a. In Finder navigate to the folder where you placed the plugin.  

b. Right-click LRMogrify2.lrplugin and do Show Package Contents.

c. Open the subfolder LRMogrify.extras.

d. Hold down the Ctrl key, right-click "magick", and do Open.

e. Confirm when it asks if you really want to open it.

f. Close the Terminal window that appears (ignore what it contains).

 

Now run the plugin.

1yenAuthor
New Participant
March 26, 2023

thank-you! this took care of it