본문 바로가기

카테고리 없음

Migrate Iphoto Library To Another Mac

17 10 likes 31,408 views Last modified Jul 14, 2019 4:24 AM

Your migration from iPhoto to Photos will be smoother, if you take a few precautions.Get started with Photos for OS X - Apple Supportalso see: Updating from iPhoto to Photos for OS X - Apple Support

Iphoto


Before the migration:


  1. Now you want to move iPhoto Library to a new location in internal drive of Mac computer (frankly, I don't know why, maybe you just want). Other cases include that you run out of hard drive space in Mac (Mountain Lion included) due to the high resolution photos taken by camera, or you just bought a new Mac computer (Mac OS X 10.11 included).
  2. Jan 29, 2015 Cool Tip: If you want to transfer your iPhoto Library to another Mac just plug your drive to it and copy your iPhoto library backup to the target Mac’s Pictures folder. Be warned though, this.
  3. Apr 16, 2015  When you first open Photos, you will be asked to choose a library. First select the largest library and wait for it to completely migrate from iPhoto or Aperture (this could take a very long time.
  4. Jan 29, 2020  Learn how to move your Photos library to another drive to save space on your Mac. Your Photos library holds all your photos, albums, slideshows and print projects. If your library is large, and you want to free up storage space on your Mac, turn on iCloud Library and use Optimise Mac Storage, or move your photo library to an external drive.
Migrate iphoto library to another mac to windows 10
  1. Backup: First of all, as always, when upgrading the system, make a full backup, so you can revert to the previous state. Make a Time Machine backup or a bootable clone.
  2. Prepare the library: Ensure that your iPhoto Library has no issues before the migration. Repair the permissions, and repair the database. http://ilifehelp.com/tutorials/iPhoto/rebuild/How.to.rebuild.repair.iPhoto.html
  3. Prepare the volume: If your iPhoto Library is not in your Pictures folder, but on an external drive, check the drive for compatibility. Photos may have problems accessing the drive, if it is on a network volume and not locally mounted. If you are planning to use the library with iCloud Photo Library, the drive must be formatted MacOS Extended (Journaled). Move your iPhoto Library to a correctly formatted locally mounted volume, if necessary. Even if you do not want to use iCloud Photo Library, the migration will only work on a correctly formatted drive. (https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT201517)
  4. Use only locally mounted volumes for the Photos Library: Just like iPhoto or Aperture, the Photos Library cannot be stored in a Cloud storage like Drop Box, iCloud Drive, Google Drive (Updating from iPhoto to Photos for OS X - Apple Support). Syncing will corrupt the Photos Library.
  5. Metadata - Places: The new Photos.app does not support geotagging as well as iPhoto. The maps are not detailed enough to position the pins correctly, you cannot name places, and you cannot copy locations from one photo and paste the locations onto other photos. If you have photos in your iPhoto Library, that do not yet have GPS locations assigned, add the locations while your library is still in iPhoto. In Photos you will have to fall back on an AppleScript (Script: Copy GPS tags from one Photo to Other Photos).
  6. Metadata - Titles: The batch changing support is still not as good as in iPhoto. If you need to batch change titles or captions, do it in iPhoto, while you can. Batch changing in Photos is very limited. Most importantly, Photos 1 to Photos 3 does not use the filenames as default titles, only titles in the title field. If you want to see the filenames below the thumbnails in Photos like in iPhoto, batch change the titles to the filenames, while you are still running iPhoto. (or use later an AppleScript: Script: Changing the Title to the Filename without Extension) Photos 4.0 can show the filenames below the thumbnails, but you cannot copy and paste them there, only titles.
  7. Events vs. Moments: Photos does not have events, but structures the library by Moments and Collections, which are created automatically, based on the locations and capture dates. It is important to check the dates and locations for consistency, before you migrate. Later it might be difficult to correct them.
  8. Descriptions of Albums: Albums and events will be transferred as albums, but Photos has no description field for the albums. If you need to save descriptions of your albums or events, copy them to the description field of the photos in the albums. Since Photos does not have events, smart albums based on events will not be transferred to Photos.
  9. Smart albums: See: How Photos displays Smart Albums from iPhoto or Aperture - Apple Support Smart albums using keyword rules 'keyword start with ...', keyword ends with ...', 'keyword contains ...', will also not be migrated to Photos correctly as pointed out by the user daiya49, see this discussion: Re: Smart Albums lost keyword criteria when imported from iPhoto to Photos . See here, what will migrate and what not: How Photos handles content and metadata from iPhoto and Aperture - Apple Support
  10. Referenced Originals: Photos does support referenced files, and a bit better than iPhoto, but photos with referenced originals cannot be used with iCloud Photo Library. But Photos has no tools to relocate originals to another volume. You cannot turn managed photos into referenced photos. I would stick with a managed library.
  11. Merge your libraries before the migration: Photos does not support the merging of libraries. If you want to merge several libraries into one, do that before you migrate your libraries, for example with Aperture 3 (Aperture 3.3: How to use Aperture to merge iPhoto libraries), if you have it, or the paid version of iPhoto Library Manager http://www.fatcatsoftware.com/iplm/Help/merging%20libraries.html

Jun 08, 2015 How to import your iPhoto Library into Photos app for OS X mac. How to Move an iPhoto Library into Photos for Mac how to replace iPhoto library with another iPhoto library into new Photos app. How to Move iPhoto Library to a New Location/Computer iPhoto is a part of iLife software application suite, which not only helps you organize and edit your photos, but also lets you get more from these photos by making photo books, greeting cards and slideshows. IPhoto will generates a iPhoto Library folder or package that contains imported photos and any albums you've added using iPhoto. Apr 23, 2011 How To Safely Move Your iPhoto Library to Another Hard Drive. Secret trick how to safely move your iPhoto libary to another hard drive. Mac Tip: How to migrate your iPhoto Library to the.


During the Migration


  1. Storage for the new Photos Library: Your new Photos library will be created in the same folder as your original iPhoto Library. Make sure, you have free storage in that location. Photos will not duplicate your original image files from the iPhoto Library, but link to these files to save space: Photos saves disk space by sharing images with your iPhoto or Aperture libraries - Apple Support
  2. Pick the correct iPhoto Library for the Migration: Photos will migrate the last iPhoto Library you opened before the migration automatically. So switch to the iPhoto library you want to migrate, before you open Photos for the first time.


After the Migration:


  1. Don't delete your old iPhoto Library in a hurry. It does not need much space, and you may need to revert to it, if the migration will not succeed.
  2. If you are missing photos after the migration: https://support.apple.com/en-gb/HT204887
  3. User tips for Photos for Mac: Thematic Index to Photos for Mac related … - Apple Community


BTW: There is no need to do the migration in a hurry. Both Aperture3.6 and iPhoto 9,6.1 are supported on OS X Yosemite and OS X El Capitan, Sierra, High Sierra (some minor issues, and you can no longer order print Products from Aperture) and Mojave. You can continue to use Aperture 3.6 or iPhoto 9.6.1, while you are exploring Photos, so you will know, how to best prepare for the migration. But the writing is on the wall. Do the migration before you upgrade to macOS 10.15 in the fall. Neither iPhoto nor Aperture will probably run on macOS 15, Catalina, to be released next fall. Migrate your Aperture libraries to Photos or Adobe Lightroom Classic - Apple Support


This User Tip by Old Toad lists the differences between iPhoto and Photos as a check list. It can help you decide, if you should migrate to Photos or not: Photos 3.0 vs iPhoto 9.6.1: Features and Capabilities


Good Luck!



Tips

By Stephen Robles
Saturday, January 24, 2015, 11:00 pm PT (02:00 am ET)

Today's digital cameras and advanced smartphones like the iPhone 6 take stunningly detailed photos, but all that extra resolution comes at the price of larger image files. Moving part or all of your iPhoto Library to an external hard drive is one of the most effective ways to free up precious space.



Before starting the process, we suggest making an up to date Time Machine backup of your computer to an external hard drive or Time Capsule. Be sure the external hard drive you use to perform this backup is a separate unit from the one you will move the iPhoto Library to should anything happen.
If you have an account with a cloud storage service, such as Dropbox, Google Drive or even iCloud Drive, you can also upload the iPhoto Library to these services for extra redundancy.


To begin moving your library, open iPhoto, click File in the Menu Bar and select Switch to Library.


A new window will appear listing any and all iPhoto Libraries detected on your computer. If you're not sure where the iPhoto Library file is located, look at the (Default) listing and the file path will be listed underneath. This should be located in the Pictures folder of your Home directory.


Quit iPhoto by going to Quit iPhoto in the iPhoto Menu Bar or pressing Cmd+Q. Connect the external hard drive that you will use to copy the iPhoto Library. You should see it appear on your desktop.


Open a new Finder window and click Pictures in the left sidebar. Click and drag the iPhoto Library file onto the external hard drive icon on your Desktop.


Depending on how large your library is and the connection speed of the external drive, it may take several minutes or longer to complete the copy process.
Once the copy is completed, hold the Option key on your keyboard and open iPhoto from the Dock or Applications folder. A new window will pop up asking you to Create a New Library, Choose the Selected Library or Other Library. Click on Other Library.


In the browser window that appears, navigate to your external hard drive, click the iPhoto Library file you've copied and click Choose.
iPhoto will open and as long as the external hard drive is connected, will reference the library on the external drive and not on your computer's drive.

Migrate Iphoto Library To Another Mac Os



Quit iPhoto once again and eject the external hard drive holding your new iPhoto Library. Open a new Finder window and navigate to the Pictures folder in the left sidebar again.

Migrate Iphoto Library To Another Mac Pro


Right click or Ctrl+click on the iPhoto file and move it to the Trash.


Finally, to free up the space on your internal hard drive, open the Trash from the Dock or Finder window and click Empty Trash in the upper right corner.


Your iPhoto Library has officially been removed from the internal drive. You can now reconnect the external hard drive you used to copy the iPhoto library, open iPhoto and use it as normal.
If you open iPhoto without your external hard drive connected, iPhoto will give you an error message saying the 'Library cannot be found.' Quit iPhoto, connect the external hard drive and reopen to fix.
For those looking to expand their beyond their Mac's internal storage HDD or SSD, AppleInsider

How Do I Move Iphoto Library To Another Mac

recommends having at least 1TB of extra space at the ready. A few high quality external and portable hard drive options from Seagate, HGST and Western Digital are listed below.

Migrate Iphoto Library To Another Mac Book


How To Repair Iphoto Library

  • Seagate 1TB Backup Plus Slim for Mac for $72.99 from B&H and Amazon.com or $88.99 from MacMall
      Also available in 2TB for $99 from Amazon and B&H or $149.99 from MacMall

  • HGST 1TB Touro S Ultra-Portable External Hard Drive for $69.99 from B&H or $83.99 from MacMall
      Available in 4TB for $149 from Amazon and B&H

  • Western Digital 1TB My Passport Drive for Mac from Amazon for $68.45, $69.00 from B&H or $70.99 from MacMall
      Available in 2TB for $96.24 from Amazon, $99 from B&H or $101.99 from MacMall