


Since she has organized by date already, she can go to 2016 and click the travel tag, and all the travels of that year will come up. "So, for example, my personal library is about 100,000 photographs, but I only have about 20 keywords," Carvajal says. Google Photos also allows manual tags.Ĭarvajal likes using Adobe Lightroom to do this and recommends not getting bogged down by an overwhelming number of tags.

The photos app that comes with Macs lets you add keywords, and Windows similarly lets you add tags to your photos. Tagging means writing to the metadata - information that travels with the digital image file - so that any computer can more easily search and sort, going forward. So just bite the bullet and get it done now." "Next year you're just going to have more photos. You actually have to do it," says Kim Komando, consumer tech expert and national radio show host. "Organizing your photos takes a lot of time and commitment, and it's something that you can't procrastinate. The recommendations below came from experts interviewed for Life Kit.) Commit to organizing your photos in the first place. ( Note: NPR receives funding from Google and Amazon. That's if - and only if - we can find 'em. Because there's something so powerful about images, preserving our memories and connecting us across distance and generations. We spoke with a consumer tech expert, a professional photo organizer and a photo-loving tech entrepreneur to get their tried-and-true methods for sorting digital photo collections - whether you're doing simple, routine prevention of photo bloat or starting a big archiving project. But when we have so many digital images and we want to cull them down a bit and get organized, where do we even start? You don't want to miss any of your dog's cute moments or your kids' as they grow up. Storage is trending cheaper and more infinite. Long gone are the days of film rolls limited to 24 shots. We take hundreds and thousands of photos these days, because we can.
