Joseph Linaschke over at ApertureExpert.com has an excellent article that goes over in detail one of my favorite new features of Aperture 3: the ability to not only manage multiple libraries, but to synchronize them as well. If you work with Aperture on both a desktop and a laptop, it is now possible, for instance to have a pared down version of your library that goes on the road with you, and can be synced back to the main library once you’re back home. You can also export any project (or album or book, etc.) as a Library, move it to another machine, and open it up with no fuss. Changes made to the project — including metadata, adjustments, etc. — on either machine are applied when you sync, and Aperture does a great job handling conflicts between the two, allowing you to specify which library’s changes should take precedence. Head on over to the article for more details on how it all works.
ISO50: Overcoming Creative Block
Design blog ISO50 has a great post on overcoming creative block, featuring helpful strategies from several design superstars including the NYTimes’ Khoi Vinh, Chuck Patterson and Google’s Ji Lee.
Aperture Quick Tip: Update Your Metadata Presets
Aperture’s metadata is saved in an XML document and can be easily updated.
Aperture users: Are you using Metadata Presets? If not, you should consider it - they’re really handy for entering metadata on large numbers of images, particularly at the point of import. I have one fairly generic preset that just has my copyright info, country, and name, which I use for everyday shooting, and come up with others depending on the shoot (travel, events, etc). What I realized when the new year rolled around was that my copyright still said “©2009 Simon Abrams. All Rights Reserved.”, and that I had no easy way of changing it, due to Aperture’s woefully spartan interface for managing or editing metadata presets. In Aperture’s current incarnation, all you can do is add, rename or delete a preset; you can’t edit any of the text within it.
So what to do? Well, a little poking around in the Application Support folder (specifically ~/Library/Application Support/Aperture) reveals that Aperture’s metadata presets are (quasi-)conveniently contained in an XML document. Simply opening up the file in your text editor of choice enables you to make changes to the metadata content, save it, and voila, you’re in business. Of course, ideally, you’d be able to make these simple edits in Aperture itself - maybe we can add this to our wishlist for (the increasingly vaporware-ish) Aperture 3.
New Tutorial, at Last
Hey - it’s been a while, but I threw a new Photoshop tutorial up on the How-To section. Have fun!
Hello Brooklyn
Hello BrooklynHELLO BROOKLYN is an ongoing photo essay I started about a year ago. In it, I attempt to depict a serene, nighttime Brooklyn - hopefully, something other than the usual image of the Borough of Kings. Check it out here.
Goro Fujita: Chapter 56
Almost Stepped in It by Goro Fujita
I stumbled across German artist Goro Fujita’s blog Chapter 56, which is full of amazing paintings, drawings, sketches and tutorials. His style is whimsical and humorous, and often features robots or other fantastical creatures interacting with the natural world. Check it out at www.area-56.de.