![]() If you have an existing library you want to split up into smaller libraries, you can copy photos by drag and drop from one library to another. You can also search for photos in a single library, or across all your libraries at once. Use iPhoto Library Manager’s photos browser to quickly view your photos without having to open iPhoto itself. The possibilities are endless! Browse and search This lets you speed up iPhoto by having smaller libraries, archive old photos that you don’t use much, or organize photos in different categories or projects. IPhoto Library Manager lets you create multiple iPhoto libraries, instead of having to keep all your photos in a single iPhoto library. This duplicate analysis is also used when merging libraries and copying photos, to help prevent importing multiple copies of a photo into a library in the first place. Since it can be easy to lose track of what photos are stored in which library, iPhoto Library Manager can analyze your libraries for duplicate photos, showing them to you side by side and letting you get rid of extra copies of photos that you no longer need. You can split up a large library into multiple smaller libraries, merge entire libraries together into a big one, or rebuild a corrupt library that is causing iPhoto to hang or crash. Event and albums are also reconstructed when copied, and both the edited and original copies of each photo are copied as well. Titles, dates, descriptions, keywords, ratings, faces, and place information are all transferred along with the photos, ensuring that you keep all that information you spent hours entering into iPhoto. IPLM also gives you the ability to copy your photos from one library to another, while keeping track of photo metadata that is normally lost when exporting from one library and importing into another. You can browse the photos in all your libraries directly from iPhoto Library Manager, without having to open each library in iPhoto just to see its photos, and search across all your libraries to help track down a particular photo. IPhoto Library Manager allows you to organize your photos among multiple iPhoto libraries, rather than having to store all of your photos in one giant library. If you need to work with Photos libraries, or migrate your iPhoto libraries to Photos, use PowerPhotos instead. I have already undertaken the steps above.IPhoto Library Manager is only provided for older Macs that are still running iPhoto instead of Apple’s newer Photos app. This shows I only have 648 photos on there so why is the cloud full and how do I sort this out? Any help gratefully appreciated. I have Lr classic on my MacBook and LR CC on my iPad. I do not wish to pay adobe as well and don't need the majority of photos on the cloud. I am at a complete loss of how to move forward. However when I go into the adobe cloud it states nothing there although the left hand bottom corner shows the 79.8gb full sign. I have uninstalled Lr and reinstalled ,done updates etc and it still states cloud is full. Initially mine had synced to my 23,000 plus iPhone library and have changed all setting as above to prevent this. Visited the and deleted my library and checked nothing in synced files etc however it still states on my LR that I have no space on the cloud and 79.8gb on there despite a 20gb storage max. I have the same issue as the poster and have been unsuccessful in doing the fix. Is there something I can do to a) stop the automatic uploads (just of iPhoto content - I don't want to affect files that I'm working on in PS and LR), b) disable error messages (since pausing or disabling is not an error), and finally, c) delete the dozens of GB of photos that I don't want in CC, without it attempting to delete the originals in iPhoto (this happened to me years ago - maybe that's fixed now)? I'm sure Adobe is thrilled to have everyone max out their online storage and thus need to upgrade ($$$), and therefore have no incentive to simply include an option to disable iPhoto upload. ![]() In addition, how does this prevent other devices such as iPhones and iPads from uploading to CC? And, yes, I can pause syncing, but then I get error messages about the pause. I've seen a couple of messages about editing a file on my Mac, but people who do that get error messages about photos not syncing. All I need is for the apps to upload any active work to CC - I don't need my whole iPhoto library in the cloud. I was completely unaware that Creative Cloud synced all of the photos in my iPhoto library, until I started receiving messages about needing to upgrade my storage options.
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