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Just started using Organizer from Elements 2022. My photos on the PC are physically arranged by year and month. I would like to create new catalogs, one for each year, that reflect the same file structure. When I create a new catalog, Organizer immediately leaps into importing from folders I don't want. Can I prevent it from importing anything until I select the appropriate year and do a bulk import? Alternatively, can I create a single catalog with a folder for each year and subfolders for each month, since the files are already in that order? I tried doing that an it lumped all of the files for January from each year into a single January without indicating what year they were from.
Does the full Photoshop use the same catalog as the ones created in Elements Organizer?
Hi, David,
I am sorry to seem to be very negative in my answers...
First, the full Photoshop does not use an Organizer, it needs either Bridge or Lightroom to manage the files on your computer.
- Bridge is a powerful file browser optimized for managing images. It does not work on a catalog, and looks like the default Explorer or finder of your operating system. You can use it for free with the organizer.
- Lightroom Classic is a powerful data management built on an Sqlite database (like the Orga
...@David363815122dz6 said: When I create a new catalog, Organizer immediately leaps into importing from folders I don't want. Can I prevent it from importing anything until I select the appropriate year and do a bulk import?
The Organizer doesn't do anything without your approval. I just tested creating a new catalog in EO 2022 and the first thing that happens is an import dialog pops up. You may not have noticed that there is a (very small) Skip button. Click this and nothing will be impor
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Hi, David,
I am sorry to seem to be very negative in my answers...
First, the full Photoshop does not use an Organizer, it needs either Bridge or Lightroom to manage the files on your computer.
- Bridge is a powerful file browser optimized for managing images. It does not work on a catalog, and looks like the default Explorer or finder of your operating system. You can use it for free with the organizer.
- Lightroom Classic is a powerful data management built on an Sqlite database (like the Organizer), but it's not a pixel editor like Photoshop or Elements, it's a parametric editor. That means that the original media file is never changed, but the information about all the edits you are doing are recorded and saved together with the source file (for raw files in a sidecar xmp file, for image formats like jpeg in the metadata header of the source file).
Lightroom is a subscription licence while Bridge is available for free for Elements if you install the desktop version of Creative Cloud without any subscription software like Photoshop and Lightroom.
Now, about your project to split your catalogs, it's considered a very bad solution compared to using a single catalog. You don't get the gain of speed your are expecting and you make backup management impossible. You can't search across several years. If you have 25 years of digital photos like me, imagine the job to search by places, names or tags.
I have found that having a main year structure is enough to organize the files in the Explorer. I create a new year subfolder every year. At the same time I set my preference to import new files in that subfolder. I would need to create months subfolders, but that would be too much work for very little advantage.
Additionally, I have set my preference in the advanced mode of the downloader to store the imported files when you import by camera or card reader, not from files and folders, but there is a workaround by copying your files to a USB drive. Importing the files of any date will put them in the required subfolder of the year you have set in your preference. That way I have both the logical file structure of the catalog and a useable file folders hierarchy which can be used without the organizer.
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@David363815122dz6 said: When I create a new catalog, Organizer immediately leaps into importing from folders I don't want. Can I prevent it from importing anything until I select the appropriate year and do a bulk import?
The Organizer doesn't do anything without your approval. I just tested creating a new catalog in EO 2022 and the first thing that happens is an import dialog pops up. You may not have noticed that there is a (very small) Skip button. Click this and nothing will be imported into your new catalog:
However, each new catalog will have default watched folders which depend on your OS. Windows defaults to the My Pictures folder and also the One Drive folder. If you go to File>Watch Folders, you can delete the default folders and add your own Year parent folder. If you keep the box checked to watch sub-folders, any files added to your month folders will also be watched.
When the program finds new photos in your watched folders, a new dialog appears and you are given the option whether or not to import them into your catalog. If you don't want to add the files, simply click the Cancel button:
@David363815122dz6 said: Alternatively, can I create a single catalog with a folder for each year and subfolders for each month, since the files are already in that order? I tried doing that an it lumped all of the files for January from each year into a single January without indicating what year they were from.
Correct me if I am wrong, but I believe you are viewing the Organizer's My Folders panel in List View (which is the default). You need to view the folders panel in Tree View. Click on the Hamburger icon next to the My Folders heading and a pop-up will allow you to change the view:
Perhaps once you change to Tree View, you will understand that, as Michel indicates, it is a very bad practice and totally unnecesary, to create multiple catalogs for each year of your photos. (In fact, it is not even necessary to store your files in a particular folder hierarchy - but that's another story.) The My Folders panel will replicate the folder organization of the OS. You can select a folder in the panel and only photos from that folder will be viewable in the grid. If you want to see all of the photos from a single year, simply use the Sort by: filter at the top of the grid to sort your photos in chronological order (Newest or Oldest first). You could also put all of your photos for a single year in an Album and filter your photos that way. There are many other advantages to using the Organizer.
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David, my last post cross-posted with your response to Michel. Hopefully what I have said will help you better understand the Organizer. I will go through your last post in more detail to respond to your questions in more detail. But first, please confirm that you were viewing the folders panel in List View, not Tree view.
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@David363815122dz6 said: Would the RAW files be brought in as separate files I could edit? I assume so. I only recently had a camera that would even create RAW files.
Yes, the raw files are brought in as separate files. They are edited in the Adobe Camera Raw Editor (ACR). Once you select a raw file, some basic editing can be performed in the ACR. If you want to perform more creative editing or save the edited raw file as a jpeg, you need to click the ACR's Open button and the file will then be opened in the main Photoshop Elements Editor. You can then perform your other edits and/or save to jpeg. (I recommend saving the file in a Version Set. This will stack the edited file over the original raw file which will never be altered - although the raw thumbnail will be changed to reflect the edits made in ACR).
Also, if you have a very new camera, Elements 2022 may not have a necessary updated ACR plug-in file. Let us know if that is the case and we can tell you how to update the file.
When you are importing files from your new camera, the import dialog has the ability to stack the raw and jpeg files together. So you could end up with a single stack containing the raw/jpeg files and also any edits of those files that you have opted to save as a Version Set.
@David363815122dz6 said: I have no tags at all, file names are just whatever the various cameras created at various times over the years or a few folder names of whatever I customized as memory joggers,
The Organizer has a feature that automatically analyzes your photos and applies Smart Tags to them. This is such a powerful and proficient feature (powered by AI) that I rarely tag my photos any more. The Search function will allow you to find photos containing a particular subject with a high degree of accuracy.
@David363815122dz6 said: so there are probably duplicate names scattered around the various years when I did not rename folders, i.e., New York Trip, China Trip, etc.. Is that going to be a problem?
No problem whatsoever.
@David363815122dz6 said: I also rarely go very far back in time for searches. What year I need is found by memory or a bit of trial and error.
That is the beauty of the Organizer. You don't need to rely on memory.
@David363815122dz6 said: All of my image files are part of a tree named E:\Images. Under that is all the yearly structures. Would I just create a new catalog called, say, Main. Then use Import, Files and Folders and Get Media? I expect it could take
hours with that many files.
Yes, Michel and I would recommend that you have just one catalog and import the files as you have said, using the Import: From Files and Folders. You can select all of the folders in the Images directory and use the Get Media button to import them all. (Make sure the box to import files from sub-folders is checked.) It may take a little while on such a large number of files, but probably not hours. The files are only being cataloged, not copied. However media analysis, including face recognition could take a couple of days. I suggest leaving your computer on over night while the analysis takes place.
@David363815122dz6 said: Should the catalog be on the same SATA hard drive as E:\ images, or should it be on an M.2 SSD drive on C:?
You should probably leave it on the C drive. The catalog folder is relatively small. But you can move it to another drive without any noticeable performance drop-off. And you should copy the catalog folder to another drive as a backup.
Hope you are enjoying your retirement as much as I am. Photography can certainly take up a lot of time. 😁
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David Knapp <dknapp1117@gmail.com>
4:01 PM (8 minutes ago)
to Adobe
I have a Canon EOS R7 that 1 purchased about a year ago. It is a big jump up for me from the T7i that I was using. I have not yet tried the stack feature. Is that something in the Canon EOS Version 3 utility, or part of Elements?
I am trying to take up nature photography, with birds as a starter. I have a Canon RF100-400mm zoom that gets most of the workouts. There are still budget constraints with the accounting department, so luck plays a big factor in now much cropping I need to do.Funny how the birds move further away no matter what lens you lug along.
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David, your new camera requires ACR version 14.4. Elements 2022 only updates to ACR 14.1. You will therefore need to manually update the ACR plug-in. Elements 2022 should accept the latest version which is 16.x. See my instructions posted here to perform the update. Note that for Elements 2022, the plug-in file must be copied to the following directory:
C:\Program Files\Common Files\Adobe\Plug-Ins\Elements 20\File Formats
And can you please explain why the Tree View is not useful for your needs.