The Hard Drive is full on the computer and need to move a bunch of photo's off to a USB hard drive. That is easy, or should be but I want to keep the LR 4 editing and catalog's together. How is that done easily? I know I can move the photo's off easy enough but struggling to understand how to do so with keeping the photo editing and catalogs in tact. Feel free to IM me with suggestions, don't need to fill up the pages with instruction manual for me.
Thanks,
Dan
Opps: TOP, DON'T WANT THE WRATH OF ANWAR!!!!!
How about some weather photo since storms coming through tonight.
Hi Dan, Since your on LR4 it’s a little difficult to give specifics. I’m not totally sure that the functionality you need is in your version of LR – it “should be” - but I’m not 100% sure since I have a feeling that it was not part of the very early versions. In essence there are two ways to do the move. Either inside LR or outside LR and then rebuild the catalogue. I’ve done both and the main issue is that the process is painfully slow. Suggestion.
Hello to all, In my absence I see you’ve all been having way to much fun. Many thanks for the eclectic mix of images – I’ve been drinking from a photographic fire hose during my catch up. Epic!!!
JWilsonphoto wrote:
Airplanes a great, but how about something fresh from The Master's Hand.................
Dear Jim, I’ve important news for you. Upon showing Thea your pic of JRW III the words “Oh, he is beautiful” where said. Accordingly, beautiful is the official verdict. So, have you booked the young chap a slot at Stallion 51 yet?
The reason for my absence, and the delay in Thea seeing the JRW III news, is that her scheduled knee operation was brought forward by a couple of weeks. Herself had a new knee joint on the Wednesday morning and came back home on the Friday afternoon. Recovery is going very well and normal hostilities have been resumed! So she has now had both hips and both knees done and is fully bionic.
Ttown Aubie wrote:
Jim you are so right. Hypocrite doesn't even seem strong enough to describe them. Most of the movies today are filled with sex, violence or extremely dark material and we wonder why society has turned out in the manner which it has. Don't get me wrong movies are not the sole cause but they do play a role.
nickjohnson wrote:
The reason for my absence, and the delay in Thea seeing the JRW III news, is that her scheduled knee operation was brought forward by a couple of weeks. Herself had a new knee joint on the Wednesday morning and came back home on the Friday afternoon. Recovery is going very well and normal hostilities have been resumed! So she has now had both hips and both knees done and is fully bionic.
Good day Nick...
Great to hear about Thea's recovery
No comments about resuming "normal hostilities"
Welcome back! Thank you for the kind words re: our new Grandbaby, he is a sweet little guy for sure. Wishing Thea a speedy recovery!!
I'm headed back out for day four of this Baylor Hospital assignment and it looks like there will be several more days in the offing once the smoke clears from the big gala this evening.
Just caught your post Nick. My wife had her 2nd knee replaced in March. She has 2 knees, 3 hip replacements and 1 shoulder. Ouch!!!
Glad your lady is recovering. The operation was mild compared to the post op physical therapy.
I'm noticing an interesting trend in photography (and I'm kind of late to the party), in the past most still shooters didn't really do much with video or more advanced "cinema" work. Social media awareness and the need for instant everything has done a lot to bring this change about, but the ability to capture and edit high quality video footage is fast becoming a necessity for a still shooter who wants to remain relevant. A great example is the assignment I'm on. When we began shooting early in the week I asked my client if they had a need for footage walking through each of the spaces we're styling and shooting, she immediately said how fantastic something like that would be and that it would open up a whole new avenue for her architectural firm to display their work. I explained that, at the moment, the only technology I had to produce the kind of product we were discussing was my MOVI/iPhone 10 combination and that there were some limitations to that set up. As they say, the best camera is the one you have with you, so we captured each space I did a few walk throughs with the MOVI set up and we moved on to the next area. The client became more and more enthralled with what we could produce to compliment our still imagery and so we I began familiarizing her with some of the technology that's available to really do this work correctly. The more we discussed it, the more ideas we came up with, including doing high quality client "interviews" for the firm and creating a library of all this media for customized presentations.
Coincidentally, I've been talking to Ikan for a couple of months about their gimbals, particularly one that they have designed and will be releasing later this month. The "Pivot" can carry an 8lb. camera load which is pretty substantial for a gimbal designed to shoot run and gun footage. This unit will easily handle a DSLR and, they tell me, my Sony cinema cameras up to, but not including the FS/7, which is OK. MOVI makes their big MOVI Pro for applications like that if I end up needing to use the FS/7 on some of this. Sony's new 3 Chip wonder is being shipped to me at the end of June and so, supposedly is my "Pivot", which should work out perfectly because this particular client has a half dozen new projects around the country to shoot this summer. I find all this new technology so exciting, invigorating in fact, what an era to be an image maker!
Danpbphoto wrote:
Love the tracked vehicle Massimo!
There are 16 know surviving Lorraine 37L out of over 600 build, only 3 of them are still in running order. This is the first time ever I see one running.
Danpbphoto wrote:
There was a funny incident that happened in Richmond, Va this week, when someone stole a tracked armored vehicle from the Army and led police thru the streets of R'mond and the fastest he could go was 40mph. He dared the police to try and block him!! .
Yeah, I've read about that. This time around it was indeed a funny story, but there are legitimate concerns about armoured vehicles in private hands, if something like a 40 ton tank goes out of control the police has nothing that could stop it...
Massimo Foti wrote:
There are 16 know surviving Lorraine 37L out of over 600 build, only 3 of them are still in running order. This is the first time ever I see one running.
Yeah, I've read about that. This time around it was indeed a funny story, but there are legitimate concerns about armoured vehicles in private hands, if something like a 40 ton tank goes out of control the police has nothing that could stop it...
Massimo
You are correct outside some weapon but the police just let the guy run out of gas to stop him.
Even this little vehicle would pancake any normal car these days.
Thanks for comment!
Dan
I say this every time Canon upgrades the 70-200/2.8, but what in the world could they improve? They'll be shocked, but I'm thinking I'll pass on this iteration. When I tell my Canon Buddy something like that, a trial copy of whatever ends up on my doorstep and I most always end up eating my words...... The only instance that that has not been the case is their cinema camera/lens line up, not that it's not great stuff, I'm just so pleased with my Sony gear that I don't see a reason to switch.
JWilsonphoto wrote:
I say this every time Canon upgrades the 70-200/2.8, but what in the world could they improve? They'll be shocked, but I'm thinking I'll pass on this iteration. When I tell my Canon Buddy something like that, a trial copy of whatever ends up on my doorstep and I most always end up eating my words...... The only instance that that has not been the case is their cinema camera/lens line up, not that it's not great stuff, I'm just so pleased with my Sony gear that I don't see a reason to switch.
JWilsonphoto wrote:
I say this every time Canon upgrades the 70-200/2.8, but what in the world could they improve? They'll be shocked, but I'm thinking I'll pass on this iteration. When I tell my Canon Buddy something like that, a trial copy of whatever ends up on my doorstep and I most always end up eating my words...... The only instance that that has not been the case is their cinema camera/lens line up, not that it's not great stuff, I'm just so pleased with my Sony gear that I don't see a reason to switch.
Just caught your post Nick. My wife had her 2nd knee replaced in March. She has 2 knees, 3 hip replacements and 1 shoulder. Ouch!!!
Glad your lady is recovering. The operation was mild compared to the post op physical therapy.
Dan
Hi Dan. Ouch, a full set, and a spare, and a shoulder too. Now that’s a lot of painful post op physio. Thea and I figure that this replacement joint gig is a two part thing. The medics do the hammer and wrench stuff, then we (ok, she) has to make all the ligaments and muscles work in their new configuration. That’s bound to be difficult since the old joint has failed / is bent out of shape and is thus messing things up. I’ve a feeling that (in the UK) the delay in doing the knee / hip replacements is causing some of the shoulder issues because folks have to use walking sticks / crutches / frames for so long.