![]() ![]() But you can still edit the metadata.Ī commonly practiced in between solution, is to relocate the originals to a large external drive which you can put away in a drawer. You cannot edit images with missing originals anymore and you can onlyl export them via drag'n'drop, again at the size of the previews. Images with missing originals can still be viewed in all ways and put into a slideshow if you have set for preview images to be created but they are limited in size to the size and quality of the preview images. With Aperture you can relocate the originals (to, eg, your Desktop) and then delete them. Thanks in advance for your help with my question.ĭo you burn your film negatives after printing them? I would hope there is an easier approach than this. I guess one option would be to export the processed photos as JPEGs into a storage folder, then delete them (Masters and Previews) from iPhoto, then import the JPEGs back into iPhoto. I would like to retain the Masters of only a small subset of photos and simply keep the Previews of the remainder. ![]() I have started shooting in RAW and have found that my hard drive is quickly filling up. If iPhoto does not provide this capability, does Aperture? When I have finished processing the images and am happy with the results, is there a way to have iPhoto delete the Master image(s) and/or promote the Preview image(s) to be the Master so that I do not have two copies of every image? I have learned that iPhoto stores the original copies of imported images in a Masters folder and then when an image is edited, the resulting images are stored in a Preview folder. Tried a search of this forum but did not see this previously answered. ![]()
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