


If you do you run the risk of Lightroom and other software treating it as a different image to another version of it. I’ve said this many times before but will say it again, never change the actual file name that the camera assigns to the file. i.e jpg or jpeg and so on or previous botched attempts to rescue a failed hard drive or images renamed the files to a string of letters and numbers. So after a few hours of configuring, downloading photos from LR CC and Apple Photos we began the import of all the images and at the same time re-organised them inside of Lightroom Classic into year and date order.Īs ever this produced multiple copies of the same photo “duplicates” and in this case, there were triplicates and even quadruples! This often occurs because the file names of the photos or file formats are different.

Having done that migration umpteen times I was confident I could assist them. The client phoned me to ask if I could help them sort it all out and get everything in one place, Lightroom Classic and organise the images into some hieratical structure. Photos stored in different places local hard drive, external hard drives, some in Apple Photos, some in Lightroom CC because they installed that instead of Classic and so on. It was a familiar scenario that I have encountered on many occasions with clients. I recently supported (through an online 1-2-1 using Zoom) a client sort out his Lightroom Library and images.
#LIFEHACKER DUPLICATE FILE FINDER HOW TO#
Tip of the day - How to get rid of duplicate images in Lightroom Background
