A simple solution to digital photo management

I recently had a bit of a meltdown regarding the state of my digital photo management. Fortunately, a photographer friend set me straight with advice so obvious I never saw it. First, let me describe my meltdown.

I became unhappy when a photo management service that I loved, that I went all-in on, shut its doors. When I retrieved the 14,000 photos I had uploaded to it, I found that all of the EXIF data had been stripped (EXIF data includes metadata and tags that make images searchable), and I had been left with the digital equivalent of a box full of 14,000 photos in random order.

Like I said, I was not happy.

But really, the problem wasn’t with someone’s failed business. The issue was (and continues to be) the sheer number of photos we take. When I was younger, we had up to 32 opportunities to get a decent picture with a single roll of film. I emphasize decent because that dictated the care with which we shot photos. We didn’t want to waste a single frame.

Today, I’ll take the kids to the park and shoot 150 pictures in less than three hours.

This behavior spawns two problems. The first problem is digital clutter. How many of those 150 photos are worth keeping? Maybe a dozen, if I’m lucky. The second problem is backups. What is the best way to preserve the photographs worth keeping? These are modern problems with, I’ve learned, an old-school solution.

My friend CJ Chilvers is a very talented photographer and, I must say, an insightful guy. He responded to my rant (warning: there’s one mildly not-safe-for-work word in my rant) with a brilliant solution: books.

“The best solution I’ve found for all this is the humble book. Making a collection of photos into a book (even if it’s just a year book of miscellaneous shots) solves several problems,” he said. He went on to list the benefits of the good old photo book:

It’s archival. Nothing digital is archival. Even some photographic prints are not archival. But a well-made book will last for as long as anyone could possibly care about your photos and then some … It tells a better story. Instead of relying on fleeting metadata, in a book, you can actually write about what’s going on in the picture … A book doesn’t care if you took your photos with a phone or a DSLR. The resolution of the photo need only be enough for the size you’d like it printed in the book.

Photo books also solve our problem of backing up the keepers, as they’re the ones that make the cut into the photo book.

There are several companies that let you make great-looking, inexpensive photo books. A handful:

Also, books aren’t going to crash, go out of business, run out of battery life, or otherwise be inaccessible. CJ’s final point is probably my favorite: “Fun. It’s more fun holding a book of your own art, than opening a database. That should be enough reason alone.”

Printing books isn’t for everyone, but it’s the organized and archival solution that we have found works for us. I also like handing someone a book of pictures instead of seating them in front of my computer to share in our experiences.

Let Unclutterer help you get your home or office organized. Subscribe to our helpful product shipments from Quarterly today.

Sochi Olympics – Frame by Frame

Afin de célébrer la fin des Jeux Olympiques d’hiver de 2014 à Sochi, le New York Times a voulu mettre en avant des performances d’athlètes en proposant un montage des sauts et trajectoires image par image. Un rendu qui permet de comprendre la complexité des prouesses techniques exécutées à découvrir dans la suite.

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Stunning Aerial Photos of Shanghai

Alors qu’il travaille actuellement sur le chantier de construction de la Shanghai Tower, Wei Gensheng profite de la vue qu’offre ce projet pour nous faire découvrir la ville depuis plus de 610 mètres de haut. Des clichés incroyables pris depuis, ce qui sera en 2014 à son achèvement, le 2ème bâtiment le plus haut du monde.

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Link About It: This Week’s Picks : Reuters’ 2013 in photos, Time’s person of the year, Miami’s new museum and more in our weekly look at the web

Link About It: This Week's Picks


1. Building 88 Ways Looking to literally turn reality on its head, photographer Víctor Enrich challenged himself to digitally manipulate a Munich building into 88 different forms for a staggering series of photographs. Enrich is known…

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Lumu iPhone Light Meter: An essential tool for budding shutterbugs

Lumu iPhone Light Meter


Considering that the light meter is one of the most essential tools for photographers—film and digital alike—it’s quite a surprise there aren’t better options available for the amateur shutterbug. Lumu, launched on ,…

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Kate Moss x Terry Richardson

Lei è Kate Moss, la più bella del reame.

Photos of the Year 2012 by Reuters

Après la série et la sélection Pictures of the Year 2012 par l’AFP, c’est au tour de l’agence de presse Reuters de nous proposer comme l’année précédente les 95 clichés qui ont marqué le plus l’année 2012, avec des images très émouvantes et parfois terribles. Plus d’images dans la suite de l’article.

Remarque : les légendes pour les clichés de Reuters, sont précisés sur chaque image.

The full moon rises through the Olympic Rings hanging beneath Tower Bridge during the London 2012 Olympic Games
A child looks on as she observes the Bisket festival at the ancient city of Bhaktapur near Kathmandu
A teleprompter obscures U.S. President Obama as he speaks during a campaign event in Columbus, Ohio
A Free Syrian Army fighter takes cover during clashes with Syrian Army in the Salaheddine neighbourhood of central Aleppo
Confetti obscures the stage as U.S. President Barack Obama celebrates after winning the U.S. presidential election in Chicago
Juan Carlos Castano turns on the TV in his emptied-out bedroom as he waits for the judicial commission to carry out his eviction in Madrid
Festival goers are pictured during the Hackney Weekend festival at Hackney Marshes in east London
Parliament employees raise flag atop the parliament in Athens
Deontae Mobley looks in the mirror after having his hair cut by his father in the neighbourhood of Goldsboro in Sanford
To match Insight INDIA-BIHAR/
Poland's Lukasz Mamczarz starts his run up during the men's high jump F42 final at the London 2012 Paralympic Games
Protesters destroy American flag pulled down from US embassy in Cairo
A police officer pretends to hang himself in front of the parliament during a rally in Athens
Paratroopers from Chosen Company of the 3rd Battalion (Airborne), 509th Infantry board a waiting CH-47 Chinook helicopter in Afghanistan
Chen Guangcheng, the blind Chinese dissident and legal advocate who recently sought asylum in the United States, is lit by a studio light during an interview in New York
Woman uses shaft of sunlight to see her ballot as she votes in polling site during U.S. presidential election in New York
Huang Sufang reacts as she sees a part of her house being taken down by demolition workers at Yangji village in central Guangzhou city
Parker Roos, who suffers from Fragile X, rolls around on the floor after getting into an argument with his sister at their home in Canton, Illinois
Cyrus Fakroddin and his pet goat Cocoa take a taxi ride in New York
Members of "Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi" try to ride a military police vehicle after a funeral for soldiers in Cairo
A physically disabled woman on her wheelchair clashes with riot police in the centre of La Paz
Gabrielle Douglas of the U.S. competes in the balance beam during the women's individual all-around gymnastics final in London
Delegates sit at stage before opening ceremony of 18th National Congress of Communist Party of China at Great Hall of People in Beijing
A view of the Yawalapiti village is seen before the start of this year's quarup in the Xingu National Park
A music group performs on a path amid fields to greet the farmers at Hwanggumpyong Island
A woman runs along a road during an air strike by the Sudanese air force in Rubkona near Bentiu
Residents push lawn mowers on a street in Nanjie village of Luohe city
Perkins prays during a vigil for victims behind the theater where a gunman opened fire in Aurora, Colorado
Artist Pavlensky, a supporter of jailed members of female punk band "Pussy Riot" looks on with his mouth sewed up as he protests outside the Kazan Cathedral in St. Petersburg
Unidentified people beat Svyatoslav Sheremet, head of Gay-Forum of Ukraine public organization, in Kiev
A Jewish boy lifts his hand to prevent a Palestinian from taking his picture near a police barrier cordoning off a building in Hebron
Actor Tom Cruise carries his daughter Suri past a group of photographers as they make their way from a hotel
Indigenous people point their bows and arrows at a police helicopter flying over the occupied barrier of the Belo Monte Dam's construction site in Vitoria do Xingu, near Altamira
A wrestler rubs his hands with mud to prevent slipping due to sweat, during a traditional mud wrestling bout in Kolhapur
The children of the Amor Divino family, Dhones, Izabely and Samille, sit on their couch in Sao Paulo
Seventeen-year-old prostitute Hashi, embraces a Babu, her "husband", inside her small room at Kandapara brothel in Tangail, a northeastern city of Bangladesh
Bavarian farmers transport their cows on a boat over the picturesque Lake Koenigssee at dusk
An Afghan man takes a shortcut by climbing a wall, at a hilltop in Kabul
Audience members watch a model during the J. Mendel Spring/Summer 2013 show at New York Fashion Week
A protester reacts as the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi is seen in flames
A firefighting helicopter fills a bucket of water in heavy smoke as the North Merna wildfire burns in the Bridger National Forest west of the town of Pinedale in Sublette County, Wyoming
A photographer is knocked down by a wild cow during festivities in the bullring following the sixth running of the bulls of the San Fermin festival in Pamplona
A Hindu devotee with his neck pierced with a knife attends Chadak rituals at Krishanadevpur village
Kudryavtsev does leg-splits while reading a book in the Siberian city of Krasnoyarsk
A young man dressed as a punk with pictures of Myanmar pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi on his shirt, attends a punk show during the water festival at a music bar in Yangon
A policeman fires at protesting miners outside a South African mine in Rustenburg
A man takes a photo as Space Shuttle Endeavour travels to the California Science Center in Inglewood, Los Angeles
An army tank fires during a firefight against militants linked to al Qaeda near the southern Yemeni city of Zinjibar
A car stops beside a house in the middle of a newly built road in Wenling
A naked protester runs past the parliament in Syntagma Square in Athens during a violent protest against the visit of Germany's Chancellor Angela Merkel
A woman hits a man with a stick after he is accused of theft along with three other men at Tactic
People travel on an outdoor public escalator at Commune 13 in Medellin
Puppy stands by remains of dog local residents said was its mother in area burnt in violence at East Pikesake ward in Kyaukphyu
Israelis react and run for cover as a siren sounds warning of incoming rockets in the southern town of Kiryat Malachi
Palestinian man checks his damaged house after Israeli air strikes in Gaza
A wounded Syrian man lies on a boat as he is transferred to Turkey over the Orontes river on the Turkish-Syrian border near the village of Hacipasa in Hatay province
Photos of the Year 2012 by Reuters 39
A man walks down Shore Front Parkway surrounded by debris pushed onto the streets by hurricane Sandy in the Queens borough region of the Rockaways in New York
Staff members reflected in the window on the room where Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney works before a campaign rally in North Canton
An indigenous man stands in a subway train as he makes his way to the People's Summit at Rio+20 for Social and Environmental Justice in Rio de Janeiro
A Free Syrian Army fighter screams in pain after he was injured in a leg by shrapnel from a shell fired from a Syrian Army tank in the Salaheddine neighbourhood of central Aleppo
A temple stands amid the waters of the flooded river Tawi after heavy rains in Jammu
Sudanese migrant sleeps under a slide in South Tel Aviv
Woman holds her malnourished child at a therapeutic feeding center at al-Sabyeen hospital in Sanaa
The skyline of lower Manhattan is in darkness except for Goldman Sachs building after a preventive power outage caused by giant storm Sandy as seen from Exchange Place,  in New York
A woman weeps after learning that a neighbor presumed missing is okay while cleaning out her home in a neighborhood heavily damaged by Hurricane Sandy in the New Dorp Beach neighborhood
Israeli border police officers use pepper spray as they detain an injured Palestinian protester during clashes outside Jerusalem's Old City
Manolis Ouranos, a 30 year-old cook, poses for a picture in the Mavros Gatos tavern in Psiri neighboorhood in central Athens
A Yawalapiti boy dips his head into the Xingu River in the Xingu National Park, Mato Grosso State
Fencer Alexander Massialas poses for a portrait during the 2012 U.S. Olympic Team Media Summit in Dallas, Texas
Fellow workers, a firefighter and doctors work together to cut steel bars which were pierced through a worker's body during an operation at a hospital in Hangzhou
Dressed as a princess, Knoepfel stands in the pits waiting for the next race during the Saturday night stock car races at Agassiz Speedway in Agassiz
Khilnath, husband of deceased Phuyal, is comforted by a family member at Maternity Hospital in Kathmandu
Kumaga visits the spot where her house, which was washed away by the March 11, 2011 tsunami, used to stand in Higashimatsushima
The remnants of a roller coaster sits in the surf three days after Hurricane Sandy came ashore in Seaside Heights
Attantion Corinne Perkins for POY
Local residents meet during sunset, with the Metallurgical Plant seen in the background, in the Southern Urals city of Magnitogorsk
The sun reflects off the club as Tiger Woods hits off on the seventh tee at the AT&T National golf tournament in Bethesda, Maryland
Palestinian gunmen ride motorcycles as they drag  the body of a man, who was suspected of working for Israel, in Gaza City
Lightning is seen during a storm under the Memorial Center in Potocari the night before a mass burial
Syrians jump over barbed wire as they flee from the Syrian town of Ras al-Ain to the Turkish border town of Ceylanpinar
U.S. soldier points his rifle after coming under fire in Zharay district in Kandahar province, southern Afghanistan
Women, wearing nylon masks, rest on the shore during their visit to a beach in Qingdao
A woman eats clam chowder as media and supporters surround Republican presidential candidate Rick Santorum at a campaign event at a restaurant in Florence
Fans of France kiss before their Group D Euro 2012 soccer match against Ukraine at Donbass Arena in Donetsk
Residents paddle their makeshift boat to safety as fire engulfs houses at a slum community in Manila
Jamaica's Usain Bolt runs to win the men's 200m final at the London 2012 Olympic Games at the Olympic Stadium
Devotees try to form a human pyramid to break a clay pot containing curd during the celebrations to mark the Hindu festival of Janmashtami in Mumbai
Students hold on to side steel bars of a collapsed bridge as they cross a river to get to school at Sanghiang Tanjung village in Lebak regency
A woman in traditional Korean costume watches as a student leaves a swimming pool of Kim Il-sung University in Pyongyang
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Woman pushes her Fiat 500 car as her dog sits inside, in neighbourhood of Rome
Administrative segregation prisoners take part in a group therapy session at San Quentin state prison
A Free Syrian Army fighter fires his sniper rifle from a house in Aleppo
An ethnic Rakhine man holds homemade weapons as he walks in front of houses that were burnt during fighting between Buddhist Rakhine and Muslim Rohingya communities in Sittwe

From the Edge of Finland

Coup de cœur pour la nouvelle série « Edge » de Mikko Lagerstedt, un photographe finlandais qui capture des images d’une incroyable beauté. Ce dernier nous propose des clichés d’horizons et de paysages à travers les endroits les plus reculés de la Finlande. A découvrir dans la suite de l’article.

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Organize your photos and videos with This Life

Many people use their computers to manage four things: work, browsing the Internet, music, and photos. For my family, photographs are a big deal. My iPhoto library is bulging at 32 GB, and that’s with 2009 – 2010 archived on an external drive. In short, my wife and I take a lot of pictures with our digital cameras and smart phones.

Keeping the lot organized is a challenge. Not to mention sharing with far-flung family and friends, as well as finding that one shot you’re after. While I love Apple’s iPhoto, I’ve been looking for something that’s platform-agnostic (Mac, Windows, whatever), easy, tidy and even fun. There are many contenders, but for right now, This Life is what we’re using.

There are a few things I like about This Life, and I’ll describe my favorites. It recently came out of its beta testing period and is now available to the public.

Getting Photos Into This Life

You can’t start using This Life until you fill it with photos. Fortunately, the process is easy. The company has made a free “uploader” application for both Macintosh and Windows. Simply download it, open it and follow the instructions. It will begin uploading any photos you throw at it. Depending on how big your library is, it may take a while, so go make a sandwich.

You can also import photos from many popular services like Facebook, Instagram, Flickr, Twitter, Picasa, SmugMug and more. I moved my Instagram and Facebook photos over to it easily.

Once your photos are in This Life, it’s time to start organizing.

Who’s Who

Many photo-management applications offer face recognition, but I haven’t found one that works as well as This Life’s. Facial recognition technology lets you give a name to a face in one of your photos. This Life then looks for that same face in the other photos and assigns that name to it. The idea being that you can search photos by face (“Jane Smith”). It isn’t 100 percent accurate but, boy, does it work well. It also runs in the background so you can do other things on your machine.

Once you give it a name/face combination to ponder, This Life gets to work. The next time you launch it, you’ll be given a few guesses to confirm. The next time, a few more. As This Life gets more confident, it does greater and greater batches and eventually leaves you alone. It works well.

Dupe!

This Life also handles duplicates very well. Specifically, if it finds two copies of the exact same photograph, it keeps the one with the highest resolution and deletes the others. That’s very handy and saves me from having to find those on my own.

Organizing

There’s no This Life application for the Mac or Windows (aside from that uploader utility). Instead, you use it in a web browser. It’s organized in a very clever way. By default there are two “views,” or ways to look at your photos: My Story and Library.

The library view presents all of of your photos at once, in chronological order, from left to right (oldest on the left, newest on the right). There are there rows of photos and a pretty little drop shadow makes them appear to be resting on a big table. A slider on the bottom of the screen lets you move back and forth, and if you have a mouse with a scroll wheel, that will work, too.

Click any photo to zoom in and share via Twitter, Facebook, Tumblr or email. You can also leave a comment and perform simple editing tasks like “Image Magic,” which attempts to correct for lighting and color balance (hit or miss in my testing) and rotation. Finally, you can delete the image or download the full-resolution original to your computer.

That’s great, but the real beauty is in Stories.

Stories

This Life lets you group photos into what it calls Stories. You can think of Stories as albums, but they’re more than that. This Life’s developers refer to them as “living albums — they are a dynamic collection of photos, videos and notes.” I’m a big fan of This Life Stories.

Creating a new Story is simple. Just click “New Story” in the upper left and give it a name. Adding photos and/or videos to a story is even easier: just place your mouse over it and click the heart that appears. That’s it. Honestly, you can add dozens of photos to a Story in seconds. To switch to a different Story, select it in the drop-down menu and resume clicking hearts.

Stories are also collaborative. You can invite others to contribute to a story and upload their own photos and videos. My family has a reunion ever year, and everyone takes pictures. It was fun to invite them to my “Family Vacation ’12” Story and see their contributions come in.

There’s more to love like searching by location, which shows all photos taken at a certain geographic location, and tags, which lets you describe what’s happening in the image. This makes search very powerful, as you can enter “Jane eating cake at Grandma’s house” and find exactly those shots. Super.

Sign Up Options

This Life is free to use for up to a certain amount of storage, and additional plans increase based on the amount of storage you require. There are many photo management options out there, and This Life is definitely worth your consideration.

Like this site? Buy Erin Rooney Doland’s Unclutter Your Life in One Week from Amazon.com today.


Lost Photos

Uncover treasures buried in your inbox with the new app
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In the past we lost photos in attics, closets and shoe boxes stuffed under beds. Now, they just as easily go unnoticed deep in the depths of email inboxes. To bring these neglected snaps back to light, Lost Photos weeds through your email account of choice to find any photos that may have gotten forgotten in the shuffle, taking the legwork out of the otherwise tedious task of sifting back through old emails. Simply choose an email account, log in and give it a few minutes to work.

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Lost Photos uncovered thousands of .jpg and .gif files among as many emails, taking us back to some of our favorite yet forgotten stories in the past year or so. If you want to expedite the task, the home page lets the user turn off .gif search or skip over images prior to an adjustable date. Once the images start popping up, share them among several social media outlets, or just hit “view photos in finder” to see the results neatly organized by date in a desktop folder.

Whether you’re searching for lost treasures or old assets, Lost Photos seems worth the $3 price tag. Visit Lost Photo online for more details and purchase in the iTunes store.