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Inspiring
May 14, 2020
질문

How to create single contact/proof sheet over multiple LR catalogues?

  • May 14, 2020
  • 5 답변들
  • 3124 조회

I've long debated the pros and cons of having multiple catalogues for career, hobby and miscelaneous photo categories. Either choice seems imperfect, but given I have nearly 1 million photos, I went with multiple catlogues.

 

Here's my dilemma: I use LR's print module to create contact/proof sheets. It's very effective for sharing previews with clients however, I often would like add a couple images here and there from different catalogues. How can I do this with ease?

 

Currently I'll either manually add thumbnails and metadata manually in Adobe Acrobat but it's tedious. Likewise, temporarily adding them to my work catalogue just to add to contact sheet is as tedious and replaces my "previously imported" folder, which sometimes is an inconvenience.

 

It's also not ideal to generate contact sheets in each catalogue, then combining since any individual contact sheet rarely fills the last page, and hence appears "broken" when combined. 

 

This may not be an often-asked question, but even if it is I'm not able to effectively Google it due to the number of combined generic search terms; creating, contact sheet, multiple, LR catalogues, etc. 

이 주제는 답변이 닫혔습니다.

5 답변

DdeGannes
Community Expert
Community Expert
May 20, 2020

This is what I would suggest since you know the Catalog (the main catalog) that will supply the bulk of the images for the proof sheet, use the other Catalogs to export jpegs/tiff files of the images you wish to use in the proof sheets at an appropriate size to a new folder on your desktop. You can name it whatever.

Then you can use the Add option to import those files into your main Catalog and you can proceed to print the proof sheets. All the images you wish to include will be available in your main Catalog.

When you are finished you can clean up the mess by simply selecting the folder within Lightroom (of the temp images) and delete the files from disk.

 

Regards, Denis: iMac 27” mid-2015, macOS 11.7.10 Big Sur; 2TB SSD, 24 GB Ram, GPU 2 GB; LrC 12.5,; Lr 6.5, PS 24.7,; ACR 15.5,; (also Laptop Win 11, ver 24H2, LrC 15.0.1, PS 27.0; ) Camera Oly OM-D E-M1.
touheyphoto작성자
Inspiring
May 21, 2020

Thanks for sharing this tip. I had this as an original workaround but have been doing what Theresa_J has suggested for a few years... that is exporting the bunch as it's own catalog without masters, therefore it exports a couple MB file that can be imported into another catalogue, referecing the photos in their original location. So it's the same as the Add import feature, but doesn't require exporting JPEG/TIFF files that then get caught up and added to my backups. 

Hope this suggestion, for your tip for me, can help your own workflow.

Cheers!

JP Hess
Inspiring
May 20, 2020

Problem is, the only file Lightroom actually opens is the catalog. And Lightroom can only open one file at a time. And you can only have one instance of Lightroom running at any given time on the same computer.

touheyphoto작성자
Inspiring
May 20, 2020

Understood. Any idea if this warrants a feature request? For intance, there may be an obvious practical reason I don't know of why that would not be possible.

Thx 

Conrad_C
Community Expert
Community Expert
May 20, 2020

You can search the official Lightroom Feedback site, where feature requests are voted on and discussed. Adobe staff often participate there. Some of your ideas may already be entered. For example, there is an 8-year-old request named Lightroom Classic: Open Multiple Library Catalogs.

 

It’s entirely possible that Adobe is open to the idea, but that it hasn’t become a high enough priority relative to other features in the pipeline. That reason is typically more likely than any technical limitation.

 

Before I started using Lightroom (Classic) 1.0, I managed photos using iView MediaPro (later bought by Microsoft, then Phase One, and now discontinued). MediaPro was able to open multiple catalogs at once, search across them, etc. I’ve been waiting 13 years for Lightroom Classic to meet or beat that capability, but for whatever reason, it still hasn’t happened yet.

josephlavine
Community Expert
Community Expert
May 14, 2020

Lightroom treats the images in different catalogs as separate entities, which is why creating a contact sheet from multiple catalogs isn't really possible. Similarly, you can't search across multiple catalogs. You would need to combine the catalogs or at least import certain images into the same catalog to create the contact sheets.

warmly/j

touheyphoto작성자
Inspiring
May 20, 2020

That makes sense. Makes me wonder if an LR feature that were to allow easier integretion betweens catalogs would be possible? Like having one calalog open and using the "second window" feature to view and work in another catalogue. 

dj_paige
Legend
May 14, 2020

Just to point out, there are people who have catalogs with over 1 million photos, and they are not having problems with their catalog.

touheyphoto작성자
Inspiring
May 20, 2020

Point taken but that's not what I've observed. Closing out my primary catalogues take my fully loaded iMac Pro a few minutes (without the LR backup). A new catalog without many images, previews, collections, etc. will close in under 5 seconds, so large catalogs must have a slowdown effect to some extent. 

 

The 1-2 minute delay doesn't sound long but when I'm quickly trying to group images into a contact sheet, it's a real workflow breaker and will usually avoid those handful of images from others catalogs.  

 

Thank you for your input addressing my own LR drama 🙂 

Theresa J
Community Expert
Community Expert
May 14, 2020

Since you aren't opposed to having lots of catalogs, you could export a new catalog from the collection of photos for the proof sheet, then import into the new collection the few more that you need. When you are done with the proofing stage you could delete the new catalog.  

touheyphoto작성자
Inspiring
May 20, 2020

There's more inconvenience built into this process vs. having them in the same catalogue to begin with, but your solution seems to be the best for someone who wants to maintain separate catalogues. Thanks for your input.