Capture Time to Exif is an in-Lightroom interface for Exiftool.
Its initial purpose, which gave it its name, was to change the EXIF dates of scanned images so that they would sort by the original capture date, not by the scanned date.
Zsh: command not found: pod - MAcOS Catalina 10.15. Fetching cocoapods-1.9.1.gem Successfully installed cocoapods-1.9.1 Parsing documentation for cocoapods-1.9.1 Installing ri documentation for cocoapods-1.9.1 Done installing documentation for cocoapods after 2 seconds 1 gem installed. I'm not too good at managing users accounts or dealing with. Mar 02, 2021 Exiftool is a tool with an enormous array of features able to work with over 23,000 tags over 130 different groups. You can even define custom tags too! Exiftool does more than just read tags though. You can also write your own logic and specify different conditions across entire libraries of images without having to use any kind of shell. ExifTool For Dummies. NOTE: THIS DOCUMENT IS A WORK IN PROGRESS. First you must install ExifTool. If you have not done so already, follow the installation instructions for your platform before proceeding, then refer to the appropriate section below to get started using ExifTool.
Onto that was added the capability to update other EXIF such as the camera model or lens.
Compatible with the original driver came with macOS Catalina. About the Compatibility of 32-bit Apps from Roland with macOS Catalina (macOS 10.15) Starting with macOS Catalina, 32-bit apps are no longer compatible with macOS. 32-bit app compatibility with macOS High Sierra 10.13.4 and later.
While you can do all of this and more with Exiftool itself, the plugin’s benefits are:
You can use the plugin, for example, to:
You can test the plugin without buying. While in unregistered mode, its features work fully but you are only able to process a few images at a time.
This 2 minute video shows how to use the Lightroom plugin Capture Time to EXIF and explains how to update a scanned photo with the camera make and model.
If the plugin has apparently failed to update the scanned photo with the camera make and model, here's how to use the command line preview to debug this and other Exiftool problems
I've just released version 2.1 of Capture Time to Exif which refines how it handles Exiftool on Mac versions from Catalina and Big Sur. It should no longer be necessary to install Exiftool separately.
Today I released version 2 of my plugin Capture Time to Exif. The main changes are a major update of the interface's layout and better handling of Exiftool on Mac.
I’ve just released version 1.26 of my plugin Capture Time to EXIF with changes like more EXIF fields like camera can be written by the plugin and improved preview when user chooses to use the Capture Date entered in the Metadata panel.