Episode Transcript

How to Organize Your Digital Photos
Episode 92: July 21, 2009

Stever Robbins here. Welcome to The Get-It-Done Guy’s Quick and Dirty Tips to Work Less and Do More.

Today’s topic is how to organize your pictures on your computer. The quick and dirty tip is to use a good program that lets you tag photos and navigate via tag cloud.

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How to Organize Digital Photos

Listener Vienne writes:

With the popularity of digital photos, I have difficulties [organizing] the thousands of digital photos in my computer hard drive. I am a very organized person, and would welcome your advice.

 
In the past, we had only memories. Like the time Mom ran through the supermarket with an apple pie on her head yelling, “Equal rights for all!” and then tore open her blouse in solidarity with oppressed workers. That was great. If we’d had cameras, we would have captured the moment … and reviewed it years later to discover that Mom had actually picked up a package of apple pie filling and her blouse remained closed. That photo would remind us what she really said was “ I need equal portions of green and red apples, right? I wonder if one of the workers can find some.” Memory is notoriously faulty. Fun, but faulty.
 
Digital cameras have changed all that. You can capture 525,600 pictures, you just can’t find them because they’re so disorganized. You need to organize them the way you plan to retrieve them, even though you don’t yet know what that is.
 

The Answer is Tags

Organize your pictures the way we organize members of endangered bird species: with tags. With birds, we put tags around their little ankles and send them into the wilderness. Then we can track the migration patterns when people send the tags back to the lab after they’ve shot and eaten the birds.

What is a Photo Tag?

With pictures, a tag is an arbitrary word we associate with the image. You can have lots of tags for an image so you can tag it any way you think you might want to find it. If there’s a picture of you and your husband, wife, life partner, or polyamorous family unit standing in the trailer park in front of your home, holding cans of Schlutz Beer, you could tag the photo with your names, with SCHLUTZ-BEER, with the date and time, or even with descriptions of the scene like HOME-SWEET-HOME or ALIBI.

Use a Tag Cloud

You find your photos with a tag cloud. Your tags are listed in a giant cloud. You click a tag to hone in on images with that tag. For example, you click SCHLUTZ-BEER and all the other tags vanish except tags appearing on images that also have the SCHLUTZ-BEER tag. Then you click on remaining tags to narrow your search. You’re left with images containing all the tags you’ve clicked.

For example, you click SCHLUTZ-BEER and see all images tagged with SCHLUTZ-BEER, including that wacky college incident you posted on Facebook (it lost you the job application, but the memory’s worth it). The tags remaining are HOME-SWEET-HOME and LAS-VEGAS. You click HOME-SWEET-HOME to see just images with both Schlutz Beer and your lovely home.

Use Tags that Describe Many Qualities

Tag as many ways as you can. Use tags that describe the event. MOHINDER’S-WEDDING or FIRST-NIGHT-I-TRIED-TEQUILA. Add tags with the month and year, like APRIL 2009. After all, Mohinder may have several weddings; you want to be able to tell them apart. If there are people in the image, tag each person’s name. CRAIG, STEPHANIE. Also tag the places, LA-JOLLA-COVE. And if there are objects, tag those too: SHRIMP or BOUQUET.

If you’re a graphic artist, tag pictures with graphic qualities so you can find the perfect photo for a brochure or ad you’re creating. You could tag the mood, ROMANTIC, FUN, PLAYFUL, the color content, WARM, COOL, COLORFUL, BLACK-AND-WHITE, and so on.

Bundle Your Tags

If you add hundreds of tags, navigation gets tricky. For that reason, categorize tags into related groups. Only the group name will appear in your cloud. Then you can click the group tag to expand it into separate tags so you can navigate. You can group your location tags into a group called LOCATION, which might expands into HOME, OFFICE, and HOT-TUB, for example

I recommend classifying tags into groups DATE, PLACES, PEOPLE, OBJECTS, and EVENTS.

Use the Best Digital Photo Software

I’ve just described the ideal solution. Bits and pieces of this organizational plan exist in all kinds of programs. Apple’s iPhoto recognizes faces, lets you tag with keywords, and groups pictures into events. Search is a royal pain, though, and events, keywords, and faces are separate program areas so you can’t navigate your collection smoothly.

On Mac and Windows, Adobe Photoshop Elements includes Adobe Bridge, where you can organize with arbitrary keywords, group keywords, and group by photographic qualities. There’s no cloud-like navigation, though, so you can’t search unless you know roughly what you’re looking for.

The Windows program tag2find comes close on the Windows platform. It isn't yet fully released, but they have free trial copies available.

The only program that does it all is Punakea for the Mac, which first introduced me to the unbelievably easy-to-use cloud navigation, which is what really makes this system sing. I’ll be giving away three free copies to listeners chosen at random. This episode’s transcript links to the entry page.

This is Stever Robbins. Follow me on twitter as follow GetItDoneGuy. Enter to win a free copy of Punakea in this episode’s transcript at http://getitdone.quickanddirtytips.com.

Work Less, Do More, and have a Great Life!

RESOURCES

http://www.steverrobbins.com/getitdoneguy/092-tag-your-files/signup.php - Sign up to enter a drawing for a free copy of Punakea

http://www.nudgenudge.eu/punakea - Punakea web site

http://www.adobe.com/products/photoshopelwin/ - Adobe Photoshop elements  

http://www.tag2find.com – A Windows tagging program

 
 

Comments (9) for How to Organize Your Digital Photos |  Subscribe to Comment

jessica wolbert Says:
9/30/2009 6:39:34 PM
hi Stever, I discovered you a few months ago. So sadly,I'm so behind in listening to EVERY SINGLE ONE OF YOUR EPISODES. This is one of my life goals. Am I too late to register to win the Punakea?
Robin Says:
8/3/2009 4:09:04 PM
Did you have the drawing yet? If not, I'd like to be entered please. Thanks Stever. Your Facebook Friend, Robin
Stephen Says:
7/28/2009 1:30:02 AM
Yes, looking for the entry form to win Punakea
Zahzel Rose Says:
7/27/2009 6:05:28 PM
I like your ideas and I will use them. I even bought the Scansnap you talked about awhile ago. Did my own Taxes and used the money I saved to buy the scanner. Would like to enter the drawing to help me with my 1000's of pictures from Europe and others. TY
victoria hellman Says:
7/27/2009 12:52:08 PM
finally a bit of information to help me with all these photos! thanks. I would like to be in the contest for a copy of punakea.
Don Says:
7/24/2009 4:57:04 PM
As an amateur photographer of a fairly advanced level, I loved your ideas. Wish you had been podcasting years ago! It took me a couple years to come-up with these tips and using them regularly, I have to concur... it is the best way of organizing. One more thing. Your ideas suggest a way to find files. You should have talked about where to physically store the files. With a good search cloud, I have navigated back to my original storage stragegy of storing photos in folders by date I name the folders something like 2009-07-07 At Dad's Place or 2008-12-31 New Year's Eve. YYYY-MM-DD will allow the system to sort your files chronologically. So I have my structure as YYYY MM YYYY-MM-DD subject With all the pictures stored in the folders. Thanks for the tips, Stever! Love the podcast! Don
Marsh Wildman Says:
7/22/2009 10:36:12 AM
Love the show. How do I enter to win the copy of Punakea?
Rebecca Says:
7/22/2009 9:39:42 AM
Stever, what about Picasa? Would you recommend it for organizing your photographs?
Brian King Says:
7/22/2009 7:25:04 AM
Looks good. I hadn't heard of Punakea before. Thanks.

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