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Storing images in catalog

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  • Paul Steunebrink
    I sometimes store images inside a special purpose catalog.

    The main advantage is that if you need to move a catalog to another location including the original raw files, storing inside is the easiest way. The link to referenced images can break, to internal images not. Also working on a catalog via a cloud drive like Dropbox or iCloud Drive works best with images stored inside because the file path that locate the images is relative to the catalog itself.

    That said, the main disadvantage of storing inside the catalog is the lack of flexibility in storage options that external drives offer for a growing collection of images that do not fit on your internal disk. In addition, but not relevant for your workflow I assume, is the ability to access images outside Capture One for externally stored images.

    For Capture One it is all the same. It has not plus or cons, everything works the same.
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  • Eric Valk
    I always store my files outside the catalog, (unless its a small special purpose catalog) for the following reasons:
    1) I occaisionally use tools other than Capture One for manipulating images. This is more complex if the image files are inside the catalog.
    2) Once you drop a few thousand 20MB or more files inside a catalog, it becomes a really big object that is hard to move. Backing up the whole thing takes up a very large amoun t of backup space. Backing up only changed parts leads to a risk the the restotreed catalog may be damaged.
    3) If you try to restore just a couple of images inside a catalog from something Like Time Machine, it is really difficult because of the folder system inside the catalog makes the image files hard to find, and after the restore process the catalog database may no longer have references to the restored image files, leading to further difficulties. Restoring the catalog database will wipe out recent changes, that's usually a bad choice. On the other hand restoring images files which are oustide the catalog is very simple.

    The risk that you incur if you store the image file outside the catalog is that you might accidently alter the image file with some other SW tool, and Capture would likely reject the image file, because it haas changed after importing. If the image files are properly backed up it s usually no problem to restore one that has gone missing, or has accidiently been moved or changed. (I've never actually had a problem with files being accidiently changed, but I have had the odd file go missing.)
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