Steven Graeber just upgraded to El Capitan and wants to move his photos from iPhoto to Photos for OS X, but:
Choose one folder to store your photos, and use tools like Lost Photos for email or even Facebook’s shared photo albums to consolidate your photos into one place. (You can archive every photo. Once the photos have all uploaded, go back to Step 1 with your next Photos library. When you’re done, the last Photos library becomes the one you’ll keep, and you can delete the others. Needless to say, make sure you have good backups first! Merge with PowerPhotos. The $30 PowerPhotos from Fat Cat Software provides a variety of extra.
Photos gave me an option of 5 different libraries to choose from. Why is there more than one? I have never used multiple libraries. And the dates on these are from times I wasn’t using iPhoto at all.
You’ve got a couple of approaches to solve this.
I’d try to figure out first what’s in those libraries, to make sure they aren’t holding pictures or video you want.
If you find that you have material in each library you want to merge, instead of multiple copies of the same library or empty libraries, you can pick one of the following:
Import each into Photos and maintain multiple Photos libraries.
Pick the biggest iPhoto library and import the entire library into Photos. Then export the media from each of the other iPhoto libraries and import all the media into your master Photos library. (Here’s my advice from last year about handling that.)
Spend $30 and get iPhoto Library Manager and PowerPhotos, a bundle that lets you merge iPhoto libraries and Photos libraries, among other advanced tasks, including removing duplicate photos.
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If you use Photos and have more than one Apple device, you may want your entire Photos library to appear on all of them. Thanks to iCloud Photo Library, this is now possible, and it’s what I describe in this chapter. (To learn about My Photo Stream, which sync only recent photos among your devices, see the previous chapter, Sync Photos and Videos across Devices.)
With iCloud Photo Library, you have just one photo library, which is stored in the cloud; your individual Macs and iOS devices can store copies of all those photos (space permitting), optionally optimized to use less storage—with full-resolution originals available for download on demand. Any edits or organizational changes sync across all your devices, too (with some qualifications; see What Doesn’t Sync). One catch is that depending on the size of your library, you may have to pay Apple for additional iCloud storage. (For more details and tips, see my TidBITS article iCloud Photo Library: The Missing FAQ.)
Unfortunately, Apple currently offers no good way for two or more people to keep their photo libraries in sync with each other, whether they’re using the same Mac (with different user accounts) or different Macs. iCloud Family Sharing (see Share Family Photos), iCloud Photo Sharing, and third-party tools (discussed in this chapter) can partially address this problem, but with numerous qualifications.
To enable iCloud Photo Library:
OS X: In Photos, go to Photos > Preferences > iCloud and select iCloud Photo Library ①.
Alternatively, select Optimize Device Storage to keep smaller versions of the photos on your device to save space—the app downloads larger versions as needed.
Once you’ve done this on each device, photo libraries will begin syncing with each other. You can also view, upload, or download iCloud Photo Library photos in the Photos Web app on the iCloud Web site.
Per this Apple support article, certain kinds of metadata don’t sync across devices when using iCloud Photo Library:
iCloud Photo Library is the best way to sync all your photos between Macs, but there are other ways to approach the task, each with its own limitations:
Note: Although there are ways to do some of these things with iPhoto, they’re more complicated and less reliable. Since Apple is no longer distributing iPhoto, I don’t cover it in this book.
I said Apple currently offers no good way for two people to share the same complete Photos library, but there is a way to sort of do it, as described on this Apple support page (the instructions are for iPhoto but they work for Photos too.) The workaround involves working from an external drive that other users can also access.
This method has two key limitations:
In other words, this technique works reasonably well for sharing a library across user accounts on a single Mac, but poorly for any other scenario.
Tip: To learn much more about iCloud’s photo syncing and sharing features, read my book Take Control of iCloud.
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