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Passionate About Organizing – How To
Create A Single System To Organise Both Your Digital And Traditional
Photographs
by: Kesh Morjaria
Digital photography promises much. Store your
photographs on your computer, print them when you want, email them to
friends and family – share them to your heart’s content. Couldn’t be
easier, could it? So how come that for most of us storing and sharing
our photographs is a bit of a nightmare?
The ease of using a digital camera is its very undoing.
It’s easy to take some shots and then ‘work on them later’. The trouble
is that ‘later’ doesn’t happen often enough and we build up a huge
backlog of images that we have to sort and process. That’s where things
start to get untidy. Very soon you won’t know what you’ve printed or
you won’t be able to find the original file of that cute shot that your
wife wants a copy of.
So what’s the answer? As the Greek philosopher Hesiod
put it nearly 3,000 years ago, “It is best to do things systematically
and disorder is our worst enemy.” You need to plan a system for
processing your photographs and be systematic in everything you do
You probably remember that after the thrill of your
first digital camera, you began to realize some of its limitations.
Without a computer or other digital device, it’s hard to share them
with granny or the cousins back home. You realize that you have to have
traditional prints to pass around and share.
So the planning system you adopt must cater for both
digital and physical prints – you need a single system that organizes
both and ensures your precious memories are stored forever.
Here’s a six point plan to establishing your own system.
1. Decide how you want to organise your photographs
Without a system, you’ll just get a list of meaningless
file names. The longer this goes on, the harder it will be for you to
find the photos that you want.
You’ve got to have a system – a way of organising – one
that suits you. I choose to organise my photos by event – but you could
do it by date, by family member or by whatever is meaningful to you.
Under ‘My Pictures’ on my hard drive, I have four
sub-folders – Family, Business, Holidays and ‘The Best’. The first
three are self-explanatory; ‘The Best’ is where I keep images of which
I’m particularly proud.
2. Create mirror images on both your computer and photo
album
People love traditional prints so no matter how proud
you may be of your computer skills, to really share your photos with
friends and family, you’ll need physical prints to pass around. And to
get the most from your memories you should have a single system that
runs across both.
Once you’ve decided on your system – use the same
categories on both your computer and your physical photo album.
3. Taking your photos
Snap away happily but don’t carry around useless
photographs on your camera or waste your time downloading them before
deciding to bin them. As soon as you’ve taken photographs have a quick
look at them and dump the ones that don’t look special. Be ruthless and
immediate.
4. Downloading back home
The temptation is to rush and get the exciting photos on
the machine. This is where discipline is needed. You need to have an
uninterrupted session. If you can arrange that easily fine. If you
can’t you should set aside a regular time once a week to do all your
photographic work.
There are four tasks:
- Download your photographs onto your hard disk
- Edit them, e.g. get rid of red eye
- Give each file a meaningful name with a date – so
instead of ‘P1010012’ use ‘Sarah on the beach 07/03’
- Save them in the appropriate folder.
Now make a back up copy. This is essential – you don’t
want to risk losing your images. I use a ZIP drive for back-up.
5. Print your photographs
Plan what prints you want, print them and put them into
your album immediately. Update your album index as you do so.
6. Store them and show them (but don’t ever give them
away)
Never give your album photographs away. If someone wants
a copy, resist the temptation to hand them your album copy. Instead,
print them a new one or email them a digital version.
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About The Author
Kesh Morjaria is passionate about organising and
runs Arrowfile.com.
He provides an extensive range of organizing products that are used not
only in the home but by professional photographers, collectors, local
government, museums – even police forces. You can find the full range
at http://www.arrowfile.com.
kesh@arrowfile.com
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Here is today's feature Photography article.
Guidelines for Printing Great Photos at Home
by: Kelly Paal
So you have this great digital camera and you’ve taken lots of great photos. Now what? Well you could go to a store and have them print your images for you, but isn’t that what you did with film? The point of all this great digital technology is that you can print your own photos at home without having to pay someone else to do it. Here are some tips to help you get started:
Click here to read the whole article.
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