

The Search field does no good because you can’t combine queries. For example, pictures shot in really low light with your iPhone 4s. This is all well and good, but sometimes it helps to search for more than one bit of information. If this is a habit, maybe you should search for any images taken with an iPhone 4s (or any iPhone model you’ve owned) and remove its worst efforts from the results. I’m going to guess that you didn’t do this with a DSLR bur rather with your phone. You say that you snap pictures of items at the store. Find out by searching for its name- CrudCam A200, for example. Much as I love my cat, I don’t need these thumbnail images.ĭo you have a less-than-terrific camera in your past? Though it may have captured a few precious memories, perhaps a lot of its images are no longer up to snuff. (Note that such a search will also cause 2400 pixel images to appear in the list of results, so be sure you’re tossing an actual thumbnail rather than a larger image that has 240 somewhere in its EXIF data.)

These are surely candidates for the scrap heap.

This metadata is searchable within iPhoto and other apps and if you can pinpoint those images that are likely to be crummy based on information in the EXIF data, you’ve made a better start.įor instance, if you enter 240 in iPhoto’s Search field, any 240 by 180 thumbnail images will appear. When you take a picture with a digital camera, metadata (the EXIF data) is embedded in it. With that done I’d then create a strategy for eliminating the clunkers based on their EXIF (EXchangeable Image Format) data. If your iPhoto library is anything like mine, eliminating the duplicates will put you way ahead of the game. It also provides you with plenty of results options-what to do with the duplicates that the app finds (trash them, rename them, and so on). Unlike some other utilities I’ve tried, it allows you to search by a variety of factors, including SHA1 checksum, creation date, EXIF creation date, first x characters of title, first x characters in filename, width, height, and file size. For this kind of thing I like Brattoo Propaganda Software’s $8ĭuplicate Annihilator for iPhoto. Varied success though you might achieve, I’d start with the duplicates.
