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Where Are My Lightroom Photos, Presets, and Catalogs Stored? (2021)

30 Jun

The post Where Are My Lightroom Photos, Presets, and Catalogs Stored? (2021) appeared first on Digital Photography School. It was authored by Helen Bradley.

Are you struggling to determine where Lightroom stores your photos? Looking for your Lightroom catalogs? Need to identify the location of your presets?

In this article, I’m going to share quick, easy ways to determine where Lightroom has stored all of these items – photos, catalogs, presets, and more.

And by the end, you’ll know exactly where to find your files.

Let’s dive right in.

where are my Lightroom photos, presets, and catalogs stored?

Where is my Lightroom catalog stored?

To find the storage location of your current Lightroom catalog, simply select Edit (Lightroom, if you’re on a Mac), then tap Catalog Settings:

select the Catalog Settings option

Lightroom will display where your catalog is stored:

view the location your catalog is stored

To open your catalog’s location, click Show:

open your catalog by clicking "Show"

You’ll be taken to your catalog folder. And if you look inside, you’ll see your .lrcat files, which contain your catalog data.

see your catalog folder

You can also find the location of your catalog by right-clicking on the Lightroom title bar, then selecting Show Catalog location:

select Show Catalog Location to see where your Lightroom catalog is stored

Your catalog file will pop open (though note that you’ll be one level deeper in the folder hierarchy compared to the previous method).

Where are my Lightroom presets stored?

There are two simple methods of finding your Lightroom presets; the first will take you to the folder containing all of your presets, while the second will take you to the location of an individual preset.

Method 1

To find where your Lightroom presets are stored, select Edit>Preferences (Lightroom>Preferences if you’re on a Mac):

select the Preferences option in Lightroom

The Preferences window will open. Select the Presets tab:

choose the Presets tab

Finally, select the Show Lightroom Develop Presets button (depending on your version of Lightroom, this might instead say Show Lightroom Presets Folder):

hit the Show Lightroom Develop Presets button to see where your presets are stored

And you’ll immediately be taken to your preset storage location.

your Lightroom preset storage location

Note: You’ll need to click to see each individual preset folder:

the preset folders

Method 2

To find the location of an individual preset, here’s what you do:

First, open the Lightroom Develop module:

tap on the Develop module in Lightroom

Then navigate to your Presets panel on the left-hand side:

the Presets panel in Lightroom

Right-click on a preset, then select Show in Explorer:

select Show in Explorer

Lightroom will instantly open the preset in its corresponding folder:

see your presets in the preset storage location

And you’ll be able to see many of your other presets, as well.

This is useful for situations when you’ve created your own preset and want to share it with others. You simply need to find the preset file, then share it!

Where are my Lightroom photos stored?

Lightroom is a catalog program, which means that it doesn’t actually store your images – instead, it simply records where your images are stored on your computer, then stores your edits in the corresponding catalog.

In other words, the images you import into Lightroom are located exactly where you chose to store them on your hard drive, USB drive, etc., and not in your Lightroom catalog.

So to find the location of a photo, simply right-click on its thumbnail, and select Show in Explorer (or Show in Finder for Mac users):

clicking Show in Explorer

The relevant folder will appear with your image selected.

You can also see where an image exists inside Lightroom by right-clicking on that image, then selecting Go to Folder in Library:

clicking Go to Folder in Library to see where a Lightroom photo is stored

This will switch you over to the Library module and select the folder in which your image is stored:

your storage location for a particular photo

(Note that the selected folder corresponds to the actual hard drive location of your file.)

Why are my images stored in that location?

When you import photos into Lightroom, you’re given three broad options:

Copy, Move, or Add.

copy, move, and add files to Lightroom

You can copy the photos, which creates a copy of each file in the selected location but leaves the originals alone. Then, when you ask Lightroom to show the location of the images, it will display the location of the copies.

You can move the photos, which deletes the originals and copies the files into your new selected location.

Or you can add the photos, which leaves the originals in place and makes no copy of the files; instead, Lightroom just records where you’ve stored your images. In this case, the images will stay where you initially stored them.

Where are Lightroom backups stored?

When you back up your Lightroom catalog, the actual catalog is backed up, but not your photos.

By default, the backup of your catalog is stored in the same location as your Lightroom catalog (in a folder called Backups).

However, if you want the exact backup location, or you’re struggling to find your backup folder, simply select Edit>Catalog Settings (or Lightroom>Catalog Settings on a Mac):

select the Catalog Settings option

Then switch the Back up catalog option to When Lightroom next exits:

force Lightroom to back up when it exits

That way, the next time you exit Lightroom, you’ll see your backup folder location:

view the location of your Lightroom backups

And you can also change the backup location if you like (by selecting a different folder).

Lightroom photos, presets, and catalog storage: conclusion

Hopefully, you now know the exact location of your Lightroom files.

So you should be ready to do anything you might need – such as move catalogs, find photos, and more.

Good luck!

The post Where Are My Lightroom Photos, Presets, and Catalogs Stored? (2021) appeared first on Digital Photography School. It was authored by Helen Bradley.


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Facebook now says ‘millions of Instagram users’ had their passwords stored in plaintext

19 Apr

Last month, Facebook shared a blog post detailing how passwords of Instagram, Facebook and Facebook Lite users were stored in plaintext on its servers. At the time, Facebook said only ‘tens of thousands of Instagram users’ were affected. Now, Facebook has updated the post to say ‘millions of Instagram users’ had their passwords stored in plaintext on its servers.

Facebook claims ‘these stored passwords were not internally abused or improperly accessed’ and says it will notify the users with exposed passwords. Krebs on Security reports more than 20,000 Facebook employees had access to the plaintext passwords, some of which date as far back as 2012.

Regardless of whether or not you’ve been notified by Facebook of a breach, it would be a good idea to change your Facebook and Instagram passwords as well as the passwords on any other login that shares those passwords.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Photographic treasure trove stored in former limestone mine

02 May

Screen_Shot_2014-04-30_at_2.12.04_PM.png

Where do you store your image archive? A file cabinet? Drawer? A documentary called ‘The Invisible Photograph’ created by the Hillman Photography Institute of the Carnegie Museum of Art explores an old limestone mine where Corbis Images keeps its Bettmann Archive, a collection of more than 11 million historical images. Learn more

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Younity lets smartphones access photos stored on your computer

16 Feb

2014-02-10_15.23.51.png

While other phone-to-computer services require syncing a select set of files to ‘the cloud’, a service called Younity offers mobile access to all your photos and other files via direct access. The company’s new iOS app allows users to connect to and browse the contents of computers and connected hard drives over the airwaves. Click to learn more.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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LiftBed & BedUp: 2 Space-Saving Beds Stored on Ceilings

07 Oct

[ By WebUrbanist in Design & Furniture & Decor. ]

lift bed up systems

In a bid to one-up the traditional fold-up Murphy bed, two companies are switching a wall-based storage approach for a ceiling-centric alternative. For those with higher spaces above but less square footage below, this design direction takes advantage of headroom while keeping clutter off floors and walls.

bedup hybrid space design

bedup ceiling design

BedUp is a French creation that solves multiple problems with folding wall beds. First, as alluded to above, it shifts the burden to storage vertically rather than horizontally.

bedup up down configurations

Second, however, the BedUp also can come to rest at various heights, leaving room for storage or full-sized furniture underneath even when deployed downward for use.

liftbed up and down

LiftBed is a German company offering an arguably sleeker-looking solution but it comes with a few catches. The cantilever that allows the bed to look like it is hovering, for instance, means more hidden mechanical and support elements are needed, in turn taking up more space.

up-and-down-beds

That said, the resulting LiftBed looks clean, minimal and incredibly well-integrated with its interior surroundings, so if aesthetics are your primary concern, this approach may be the best.

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[ By WebUrbanist in Design & Furniture & Decor. ]

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