Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2007/01/22
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I have two 250 gig Maxtor stand-alone external hard drives that plug into the USB ports on my laptop. I move the RAW files to one of the hard drives and 'processed' photos are saved to the other. I can usually keep only a couple of months worth of photography on my laptop so the move process is a regular occurrence. So far so good. Bill in Denver -----Original Message----- From: lug-bounces+bill=photobynelsch.com@leica-users.org [mailto:lug-bounces+bill=photobynelsch.com@leica-users.org] On Behalf Of Peter Klein Sent: Monday, January 22, 2007 12:12 AM To: lug@leica-users.org Subject: [Leica] Drowning in digital files I'm a bit of a squirrel. I rarely throw anything away unless forced to. Then once in a while, reluctantly, I do a big cleanup. As with life, so with computers. I have files on my computer that date back to 1983, the year I started working with PCs, plus some converted CP/M files from even earlier(!) This has not been much of a problem--most of it has been text, and the size of the hard drive on the new computer I buy is always bigger than the old one. So I never hit the ceiling. Until now. Enter digital photography, where one TIFF is the size of my entire hard drive 10 years ago!! A 16-bit TIFF of a scanned frame of color film is about 125 megs. An E-1 RAW file is 10 megs, and a 16-bit work TIFF is 28 megs. B&W films scans are 40 megs. It adds up. My hard drive is nearly filled with RAW files, scanned TIFFs and intermediate work TIFFs. I was embarking on a ruthless rampage through the directories, meaning to get rid of lots of digital flotsam and jetsam. Then I found a keeper RAW file I hadn't noticed before (see "Found on my hard drive"). And this gave me pause. Problem is, I end up with a lot of unneeded junk on my drive, but it's hard to decide what's needed and what's not. I'd be interested in how other LUGgers cope with this--what do you keep? What do you throw away? How do you decide? My inclination is to keep: 1. RAW file or the original scan. 2. Final version, unsharpened (8-bit TIFF, PNG, or high-quality JPG) 3. Reduced JPG for Web. But with film, sometimes it seems to make more sense to keep the spotted version of the original, or even the 8-bit version after the curves are right. It depends on the image. Sometimes I save several version, decide on one, then come back and use another curve or cropping later. Or I don't spot until I decide the image is worth working furthre. That's where it gets confusing. Add to that, what format do you keep your final files in? I used to think TIFF was the only way to go, but I'm now wondering if PNG might be better (lossless compression, often 30% smaller than an 8-bit TIFF). And I've read that some people keep a very high-quality JPG--and I must say, with my E-1 DSLR photos, I usually don't notice a difference between TIFF and such a JPG. I'm also wondering whether it's worth it to go through years of files and delete intermediate files, or just buy a bigger disk and try to streamline my future workflow to leave fewer files in the first place. Or buy a DVD burner--but I'm concerned about the longevity of any home-burned optical media. A big hard drive or two, plus a matching external for backup seems better. Note that I use Picture Window Pro, not Photoshop, so I end up saving several different files at various stages of editing, rather than having layers in one humongous file. Then again, I don't need a gamer's PC with 2 gigs of RAM just to get by. --Peter _______________________________________________ Leica Users Group. See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information