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Ten Tips to a Clean Aperture Library (8 of 10) — Update Your Places

PhotoJoseph's picture
April 19, 2012 - 12:00am

(If you’re just joining us, start with Tip 1)

Tip 8 — Update Your Places

I’m a huge fan of Aperture’s Places feature, and even dedicated a recent Live Training session exclusively to it (check out Session 017). The reason I think it’s so awesome is that when looking back at years and years of photos, it can be exceptionally cool to look at a map and see all the places you’ve been, and instantly dive in to see the photos there. Even if you don’t get any more specific than dropping all 2,000 photos from your vacation to Paris onto “Paris, France” on the map, you can still take full advantage of this feature. Not only does it make it easy to find photos from that place we went to, you can also instantly see all the accumulated photos over years of visits. For example if you visit grandma in St. Louis with the kids every summer, you could immediately view every photo taken on every trip there by simply zooming in on the map.

Viewing all your photos on a map is very, very cool (click to view larger)

In the Live Training I got into specifics on how to assign individual or groups of photos, by a variety of methods including drag-and-drop on the map, searching for location names, and even integrating dedicated GPS receivers or GPS logging apps into your workflow. But there is one super-easy way to do this that I neglected to mention in the training, and that’s using Aperture’s Project Info pane.

When you’re in Projects view, as you roll over a Project, you’ll see a little info (i) icon show up.

Click the info (i) button to open the Aperture Project Info pane

Click that to open up the Project Info pane.

The Aperture Project Info pane can be a treasure trove of info

Here you can see the title and date and change the thumbnail if you like. You can also enter a description, which is quite cool as text entered there is searchable in the super-fast search window under the Library tab.

To update the location, click the Assign Location… button at the bottom left of the pane.

Clicking on “Assign Location” opens a window to assign a Place in Aperture to the entire Project

That will open Assign Photos to a Place window, which lets you search for a location and assign it to the entire project. Be as generic or as specific as you like. For example, I had some scans of old photos from a trip to Portugal when I was a little kid. I don’t know every place we went, so I just assigned the whole project to “Portugal”. The sample you see here is being assigned to the city of “San Jose, CA”. I have others where I’ve assigned them to the hotel I was in when the photos were made. It’s up to you.

Search for a location in the search window at the top, rename the Place if you like in the Place Name window at the bottom (for example, search for an address, then change the name to “Grandma’s House”), then click the Assign button. That will take you back to the updated Info pane.

With a populated Aperture Project Info pane, you can see when, where and what this Project is all about

As you can see above, I also entered a description to the project. You can change the view of the map from Satellite to Road to Terrain, just like in the full Places view.

What if I already have some locations assigned?

You might have a project with photos that already has some locations in it. Maybe you added some geo-tagged iPhone photos to this project, or perhaps you simply had already pinned a few photos to precise locations on the map — but not all of them. When you go through this process outlined above, Aperture will give you the option to Replace the existing location with the new one, but if you click Don’t Replace, then only the un-placed images will get the new location, and the others photos will be left alone.

When adding Places to photos with existing locations, Aperture doesn’t have to overwrite them

I’m slowly updating my entire, massive Library… and when it’s done, that map you see above will look even better!

Update on April 18, 2012 - 3:00pm by Joseph @ApertureExpert

Joseph covers this topic really well. I don’t have much to add to this other than to say it’s a good example of checking all aspects of your library during your Spring cleaning exercise. This data isn’t nearly as interesting at the end of the year if it’s incomplete and haphazardly applied. To the get the full benefit, keep up and don’t let your guard down.

One of my biggest Aperture Library regrets is not taking the time to square away my Places on a shoot I did in the Mississippi Delta during the Gulf oil spill. I took the time to run a GPS Tracker during a 10-hour boat ride looking for oiled birds. It took a lot of energy to make sure it was working correctly and turned on when I needed it to be. Yet, when I got back I didn’t have an immediate need for that data and I let it go. 

Learn from my mistakes, get your places up to date!

App:
Apple Aperture
Platform:
macOS
Author:
PhotoJoseph

I have enjoyed these tips as well as the video on Places. All excellent. What do you do if, when you open “Manage My Places,” you have three or four of the same location listed but on the map the pins are in a couple of instances in the wrong location? Is there an easy way to merge these locations into one?

Thanks for all you do to help us become better and more efficient users of Aperture.

Carlton,

I haven’t tried this but you can move pins while in Manage My Places, and you could try renaming them the same, but I’m not sure if they would merge or just have duplicates instances.

What might be easiest is, say you have locations A and B, where A is right and B is wrong. Just go to the Places view, locate all B images, and reassign them to A. Problem solved, right?

-Joseph

@PhotoJoseph
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Thomas wrote “I took the time to run a GPS Tracker during a 10-hour boat ride looking for oiled birds. It took a lot of energy to make sure it was working correctly and turned on when I needed it to be. Yet, when I got back I didn’t have an immediate need for that data and I let it go.”

Thomas, if you still have the gpx file somewhere, perhaps still on the device (it’s a few KB) you can import it into Aperture, match the time with one of the photos and voila, Aperture puts all matching photos based on date and time on the map. Just works (TM by Apple)

Joseph, love your site, the information in the articles and users’ response is very much appreciated.

Thanks Harry, glad you’re enjoying the site :)

-Joseph

@PhotoJoseph
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Let me make a suggestion to anyone who’s got part of their library tagged, and wants to do the rest. Just did it. Felt proud. Went to try to browse, and noted a lot of weird place data. Before you get too far into this, go to Metadata -> Manage My Places. It takes some time, but I’m actually going down the list of 800+ places and revising them.

Make sure the pin in the right place - Google isn’t perfect.

Clean up spelling, punctuation, make sure it reads how you want it to read - hey, if you weren’t a little anal, why are you tagging all your photos? For example, I tagged all of the photos from Disneyland with the attraction and the land.

Delete duplicates

Adjust the blue circle - this is a biggie. A lot of areas have so many overlapping circles that it looks like I lost at Missle command. The reason that this matters is that if you put a photo at Sleeping Beauty’s Castle, and the circle for Space Mountain overlaps the castle on your map, your photo gets tagged as being at both locations.

The little local park I take my kids to, for example, kept showing up in the place of every picture I had tagged near my house. Turns out the circle for this half-block park covered the entire island of Oahu - every picture within driving distance of my house had this park as one of it’s places.

How small to make the circles depends. If you’re doing outside geotagging (iPhone, or an app or camera that logs the GPS data), having the wider circle increases the chance that that photo’s data will fall within the circle, and Aperture will tag that photo as “Grandma’s House” rather than 21.3452341289. On the other hand, if you assign the places yourself, making the circles smaller makes it easier to label that picture as “here and only here” and bring up only the pictures from the park or the castle, and not everything within several miles.

If you haven’t already tagged your library, I’d clean up your places first. Then, as you add photos, either 1) Tag with one of your places that you’ve adjusted, or 2) use the Google places and make sure you’ve got it adjusted correctly the first time you add that place. That should keep your places clean and neat going forward.

Already seeing the difference in some areas I worked on, before I gave up and just started going down the list alphabetically. Having done this with Disneyland, it also really sped up the process of assigning places to 500+ pictures, so the time will pay back later. Can’t wait to see how it looks once I have the whole thing tweaked!

Chris

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