![]() Good bit mackeros, I recently updated 10.10.3 and migrated my iPhoto library to the new Photos App, I missed the "iPhoto events" and some other things, but in general it does its job well and is easy to use, but I have some doubts With a particular fact, my photo library has a weight of 140GB, so when importing Photos it asked me to buy space in iCloud, but I don't want to, so I deactivated that option and for this reason the great weight of my photo library will remain local backed by Time Machine. You can actually delete the old iPhoto library once you have verified that everything has been successfully migrated. We can still open iPhoto, but keep in mind that any changes made to iPhoto from now on will not appear in the Photos application, since they are two independent libraries. Wait for all your data and photos from iPhoto to be imported into the new Photos app.We will select the iPhoto library and we will click on Choose Library.We will execute the Photos application and it should tell us that the photos cannot be found in the »Photos Library« system, which is correct since we proceeded to eliminate it.We do this to avoid having multiple libraries for the Photos application and thus avoid strange names like "Photo Library 2" If the Photos library is empty as we confirmed in step 3, it must be removed from the ~ / Images Library database.Here we will check that Photos app is empty, this means it is either a new installation or an update to OS X Yosemite 10.10.3 We will double click on the Photo Library and the application should launch.Open ~ / Images and you should see at least two photo libraries: one for the new Photos app and the other which would be the old iPhoto library.Close both the Photos and iPhoto applications.The first step above all would be to go through your iPhoto library first to eliminate duplicate files and update the metadata you want in some images.The steps to follow to migrate the library would be the following: In this post we will highlight one of the easiest and simplest ways to migrate an iPhoto library to this new Photos app. The migration itself is quite simple, although there are several ways to do it. Now that OS X Yosemite 10.10.3 has been officially released, it's time to think about migrating your photo library from your old iPhoto to the new Photos app. It can bulk-export the entire library's contents in year-wise or album-wise folders, which you can import into Microsoft Photos.Since Apple announced the end of support for the Aperture application and the complete disappearance of iPhoto in favor of Photos, all users have been waiting to see if the change has actually been worth it and therefore see if we can move our photo albums to the new application. ![]() So you may want to export all the photos at once, preserving edits and metadata, from Apple Photos into Windows Photos, and recreate the albums.Īnother option is to use Photos Takeout app (Mac only). You could export one album at a time by selecting all the photos in it, but (a) it would be laborious, (b) you'll miss out the photos that you hadn't added to any album, and will duplicate any photos that you had put in multiple albums. The Windows Photos database also creates albums similarly. ![]() Photos aren't saved into any "album folders": the Photos database only stores the file paths, based on which albums are displayed when you run Photos. The latest versions of edited photos are saved in another folder. Apple Photos stores the original unedited versions of all photos in a folder named Masters (Mojave and prior) or Originals (Catalina and later).
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