Vincent Danen explains how to clean up your iPhoto library to make it faster. Depending on the size of your photo library, speeds can be improved moderately or significantly with a just a few tweaks.
When photography was print, it was an expensive hobby or career. A rare few made that leap from taking pictures for fun to making a living from it, which often required talent, a little money, or a lucky first client or two.
It is a lot easier to get into photography these days. Digital tools mean we all have something on us that could take an award-winning photograph, even if you don't invest in the latest 40 megapixel SLR.
But for those of us who are snapping away on a regular basis, either professionally or for fun and work - such as bloggers, vloggers and even writers — aren't we all content creators in some way?! — we end up with a lot of pictures on our Macs. Whatever Mac you have, they are perfect machines for storing, editing and publishing, which is great, except for the fact they can soon get full to bursting with images.
Best ways to find duplicate and similar photos
Let's face it — sometimes it takes dozens of pictures just to get the perfect one, which is easy and free when using a digital camera. Compared to film, when you had to think about every picture, since every single one cost money. Now you can snap away with abandon, and even if none of them are exactly perfect — not a problem, when you've got Photoshop and other handy tools. Almost anything can be removed, added or tweaked with a few clicks.
Duplicate Image Finder
Get a huge set of top apps for finding and removing duplicates in minutes. Best utilities in one pack, give it a go!
We can end up with dozens of duplicates, especially when shooting in raw, and then once you start editing, dozens more could be generated. All of this takes up space, and it can take a lot of time to sort and delete manually, or you can try a few of these shortcuts.
Find and remove duplicate photos manually
Every photo is special. Okay, maybe not every single photo — but the ones you want to keep are, whereas the duplicates are just taking up space.
Manual detection and deletion is one approach.
The faster way: use a smart duplicate photo finder
Or you can get Gemini app - it's a smart duplicate finder and cleaner for macOS. Just let it search, select and then, with your permission, zap the duplicates to free up loads of space on your Mac. Here's how to get rid of extra files (both duplicate and similar-looking photos):
- Open duplicate finder.
- Choose where to scan. This can be a folder or your whole Mac.
- Hit Scan.
- View the results and choose which duplicates and similars to remove.
When scanning for photos, make sure to scan in the photos library folder, or your documents folder and any attached external hard drives for images, instead of the Photos app. The icons look similar, but you'll find what you need in those folders since that will also remove any duplicates lingering within the app automatically.
Once that is done, click on Select Duplicates, and Gemini moves them all to the Trash. So don't worry if you've accidentally deleted a finished edit instead of another duplicate - you can easily get them back. And then, once you are sure everything in the trash is junk, use CleanMyMac to shred the trash, which is a great way to really save some space.
Now, a little about the similar files and what they are. Similars are files that have strong resemblance but are a little different: images taken from one angle, dozens of identical selfies, music files with different bitrate etc. This duplicate cleaner has a smart algorithm that can identify and group them, so you'll only have to click on the ones you'd like to keep.
Duplicate photo remover by folders
Another way to get rid of duplicates is using a duplicate remover in Disk Drill, Mac users favorite, because it's an app primarily designed to recover lost data. However, it has multiple great features apart from its main benefit and one of those is removing duplicates.
The process is near identical: install and launch Disk Drill, choose directory for scanning, review results and remove duplicated files that were found on your Mac.
Now that your pictures are organized, you probably want to keep the ones you've got tidy and in order. Inboard, also available from Setapp — along with Gemini — is a handy way to manage your entire picture gallery and images workflow, which should save you hours of time in the future.
Here's how to clean up your photo library when the duplicates are gone:
- Open Inboard app.
- Drag a photo into the Inboard window, and the app will save the image in your library.
From then on you can tag photos so that it will be easier to search in the future, make folders in the Inboard app and place images of a category in the folder, sort by date and title, and lots of other things.
That's about it concerning image organization. Photo duplicate removal is an extremely efficient technique for freeing up some room on your Mac's hard drive. Plus, it gets a ton easier to work with all your photo library when you only keep the good stuff. All the apps in this article are on Setapp subscription, in a single suite. So go ahead and explore them! Cheers.
Is there really that much cache in Photos?
Photos creates cache files almost every time you work with it. Here's an example. If you have iCloud Photo Library enabled, all your pics are stored in the cloud. But when you view these pics on your Mac, Photos creates locally cached copies of them. So, even if you keep all photos in iCloud, their local copies are still wasting space on your Mac.
More cache files pile up when Photos detects faces on your pics — that is, every time you add photos of people. If you import new pics often, you've probably got a lot to clean up.
RAW files take up gigabytes.
When you import RAW files into Photos, the app creates JPEG copies of them. These JPEGs are what you see in Photos — and heavy RAWs just sit on your Mac, forgotten. If you no longer need the RAW originals, CleanMyMac will remove them to save you gigabytes of space.* But don't worry: it will always ask you first.
This feature is not yet available on macOS High Sierra.
What if I'm still using iPhoto?
Vincent Danen explains how to clean up your iPhoto library to make it faster. Depending on the size of your photo library, speeds can be improved moderately or significantly with a just a few tweaks.
When photography was print, it was an expensive hobby or career. A rare few made that leap from taking pictures for fun to making a living from it, which often required talent, a little money, or a lucky first client or two.
It is a lot easier to get into photography these days. Digital tools mean we all have something on us that could take an award-winning photograph, even if you don't invest in the latest 40 megapixel SLR.
But for those of us who are snapping away on a regular basis, either professionally or for fun and work - such as bloggers, vloggers and even writers — aren't we all content creators in some way?! — we end up with a lot of pictures on our Macs. Whatever Mac you have, they are perfect machines for storing, editing and publishing, which is great, except for the fact they can soon get full to bursting with images.
Best ways to find duplicate and similar photos
Let's face it — sometimes it takes dozens of pictures just to get the perfect one, which is easy and free when using a digital camera. Compared to film, when you had to think about every picture, since every single one cost money. Now you can snap away with abandon, and even if none of them are exactly perfect — not a problem, when you've got Photoshop and other handy tools. Almost anything can be removed, added or tweaked with a few clicks.
Duplicate Image Finder
Get a huge set of top apps for finding and removing duplicates in minutes. Best utilities in one pack, give it a go!
We can end up with dozens of duplicates, especially when shooting in raw, and then once you start editing, dozens more could be generated. All of this takes up space, and it can take a lot of time to sort and delete manually, or you can try a few of these shortcuts.
Find and remove duplicate photos manually
Every photo is special. Okay, maybe not every single photo — but the ones you want to keep are, whereas the duplicates are just taking up space.
Manual detection and deletion is one approach.
The faster way: use a smart duplicate photo finder
Or you can get Gemini app - it's a smart duplicate finder and cleaner for macOS. Just let it search, select and then, with your permission, zap the duplicates to free up loads of space on your Mac. Here's how to get rid of extra files (both duplicate and similar-looking photos):
- Open duplicate finder.
- Choose where to scan. This can be a folder or your whole Mac.
- Hit Scan.
- View the results and choose which duplicates and similars to remove.
When scanning for photos, make sure to scan in the photos library folder, or your documents folder and any attached external hard drives for images, instead of the Photos app. The icons look similar, but you'll find what you need in those folders since that will also remove any duplicates lingering within the app automatically.
Once that is done, click on Select Duplicates, and Gemini moves them all to the Trash. So don't worry if you've accidentally deleted a finished edit instead of another duplicate - you can easily get them back. And then, once you are sure everything in the trash is junk, use CleanMyMac to shred the trash, which is a great way to really save some space.
Now, a little about the similar files and what they are. Similars are files that have strong resemblance but are a little different: images taken from one angle, dozens of identical selfies, music files with different bitrate etc. This duplicate cleaner has a smart algorithm that can identify and group them, so you'll only have to click on the ones you'd like to keep.
Duplicate photo remover by folders
Another way to get rid of duplicates is using a duplicate remover in Disk Drill, Mac users favorite, because it's an app primarily designed to recover lost data. However, it has multiple great features apart from its main benefit and one of those is removing duplicates.
The process is near identical: install and launch Disk Drill, choose directory for scanning, review results and remove duplicated files that were found on your Mac.
Now that your pictures are organized, you probably want to keep the ones you've got tidy and in order. Inboard, also available from Setapp — along with Gemini — is a handy way to manage your entire picture gallery and images workflow, which should save you hours of time in the future.
Here's how to clean up your photo library when the duplicates are gone:
- Open Inboard app.
- Drag a photo into the Inboard window, and the app will save the image in your library.
From then on you can tag photos so that it will be easier to search in the future, make folders in the Inboard app and place images of a category in the folder, sort by date and title, and lots of other things.
That's about it concerning image organization. Photo duplicate removal is an extremely efficient technique for freeing up some room on your Mac's hard drive. Plus, it gets a ton easier to work with all your photo library when you only keep the good stuff. All the apps in this article are on Setapp subscription, in a single suite. So go ahead and explore them! Cheers.
Is there really that much cache in Photos?
Photos creates cache files almost every time you work with it. Here's an example. If you have iCloud Photo Library enabled, all your pics are stored in the cloud. But when you view these pics on your Mac, Photos creates locally cached copies of them. So, even if you keep all photos in iCloud, their local copies are still wasting space on your Mac.
More cache files pile up when Photos detects faces on your pics — that is, every time you add photos of people. If you import new pics often, you've probably got a lot to clean up.
RAW files take up gigabytes.
When you import RAW files into Photos, the app creates JPEG copies of them. These JPEGs are what you see in Photos — and heavy RAWs just sit on your Mac, forgotten. If you no longer need the RAW originals, CleanMyMac will remove them to save you gigabytes of space.* But don't worry: it will always ask you first.
This feature is not yet available on macOS High Sierra.
What if I'm still using iPhoto?
Just like the Photos app, iPhoto has tons of junk hidden in its library. It's a whole different kind of junk, and CleanMyMac cleans it up, too. Photo Junk searches your iPhoto library to locate useless and hidden copies of your pics, kept by iPhoto after you rotate, crop, or otherwise edit them.
What else can CleanMyMac X do?
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