Get Organized in 2013
Well it’s Sunday and I’ve got homework, a syllabus to modify and presentation to plan, lots of images to edit and process from an assignment or two and just like when I was in high school and college, I’m procrastinating! When I was younger my procrastination technique of choice was to clean my room or when in college it was to do laundry. My argument was “how could I possibly be productive in the midst of such chaos.” Well you know what they say about old dogs and new tricks so today I’m organizing the mayhem that is my office.
I get a lot questions about my gear and editing workflow so here’s my system and routine for staying organized and protecting my assets:
- 15″ macbook pro – my main computer which houses my operating system and all applications (Lightroom, Photoshop, etc.). This gets backed up to a 500gb external hard drive using time machine. I also keep my Lightroom catalog file on this main drive so that I can work with collections, key words, etc without being in the office connected to the actual files.
- 1.5TB LaCie external hard drive (firewire 800) named Photo Library – this houses all my photos and related photography documents.
- 2nd 1.5TB LaCie external hard drive named Photo Library Backup – this is a mirrored copy of the Photo Library drive and gets backed up daily using carbon Copy Cloner for mac, a free backup application. If the primary Photo Library drive fails all I have to do is plug this one in and away I go, they are identical.
- 3rd 1.5TB LaCie external hard drive named Photo Library Backup – for off-site backup (explanation below)
When I come home from a shoot I first upload all my new files to a folder on the Photo Library external drive using the finder. I give the folder a name that has both a date and subject identifier, for example, 130113OakledgeParkSunset. I then launch my lightroom catalog and import the new folder with some develop presets as well as general keywords and copyright. I use the loupe in Lightroom to preview and rate the images; one star for keepers during the first pass. I then select all the non-keepers and delete them from the hard drive, no sense keeping them around cluttering up the works. I then rename all the keepers with a unique file name and sequence number. My system is based on date, ex. 130113kbp001. At this point I may begin processing images or perhaps wait until a later date, regardless I’ll be going back through another round of ratings to segregate out the real gems.
I’ve got carbon copy cloner scheduled to do my daily backup in the evening while I’m sleeping, I’ve just got to remember to turn on and plug in the second drive before going to bed. Sometimes If I know I’ll be away from my computer and not using it to process images I’ll manually initiate the backup during the day. Only after all new files have been backed up do I reformat the media cards. This should be done in your camera to ensure proper file handling and keep the cards healthy and happy.
The final step in protecting your precious files and one that is definitely recommended by the digital asset management gurus is to keep a third copy of your backup drive off site. The obvious danger of keeping two external hard drives (photo library and photo library backup) living side by side on your desk is that you are not protected from theft, fire, tornado, earthquake, tsunami, you get the idea. I leave this third drive at a family member’s house and periodically (once a month or so) pick it up for backup. When I retrieve the third drive I leave behind the other photo library backup essentially leapfrogging the drives each time.
So here’s the lesson, get organized, stay organized and make sure you are routinely backing up your photo library. You don’t have to do it like I do, there are many ways to configure your scheme or workflow, the important thing is to pick one and be consistent. Because hard drive failure will happen, it’s not a matter of if, it’s when. I’ve had it happen twice in the same year and were it not for by backup drive and system described above I would have lost 10s of thousands of images.
Technical Details: Canon 5DII, EF 16-35 f2.8L, f16 @ 20 sec. ISO 50, 3 stop grad nd

















Could you send me the specs on your MacBook Pro? In the market for a new travel laptop and feeling a bit overwhelmed. Also how big are the raw files that your Canon creates? One of the drawbacks of the D800 seems to be finding enough computing horsepower to deal with its file size when editing.
My macbook pro is getting pretty long in the tooth and I’m definitely in need of more horsepower. But hey, when aren’t we right? I think the files from a 5D II are around 25mb give or take. You’d be set with one on the quad core i7 processors and at least 8gb of ram I suspect.
Really sweet image bro. Love the spacing of the rocks and the alternating angles of all of the visual elements. Nicely done!
Spanks!
Kurt, if I send you an external drive, will you backup all of your images and mail it back to me? I’ll keep it safe. Thanks man.
BTW, great image. From the looks of the rock details, it kind of reminds me of Door Bluff Park in Door County, Wisconsin.
Sure thing, lol yardstick
This is from Lake Champlain in my home state of Vermont.
If I deleted my non-keepers, then I could back everything up with a 8 GB memory card (or two for redundancy). Hmm – maybe a change in my workflow is coming up!
For my backups I use a Synology RAID device, you can stick up to five hard drives in the model I have (currently I have 5 2-TB drives, which after redundancy is about 7 TB of space), and it appears to your computer(s) as a single logical drive. If one drive fails, you won’t lose any data (but you should replace that drive soon), and you can swap out smaller drives with larger drives (one at a time) to increase capacity. You can also increase capacity by attaching multiple Synology’s together. The Synology is connected to your network so any computer on your network can access the files (for speed, a gigabit connection is preferred over WiFi, but you could still use WiFi for convenience). All of the major operating systems can work with it (Windows, OS X, Linux) and use it at the same time. There’s also 4 USB slots on the back which I use to connect USB drives which I use to mirror the contents of the Synology, and occasionally move to an off-site location (relatives houses, etc.).
I used to have my photos spread across multiple external drives but that’s a pain to manage. I like my current setup a lot more. If I did delete all my crappy photos my needs for storage would decrease dramatically and I sense a great purge is coming in my future.
Eventually bandwidth will be fast enough that all of this stuff could be stored in the cloud (with local drives used for speed) but that’s still a few years away at least.
Sweet image too! Digging the long exposure effect on the water, the color in the sky and the reflection, and the leading rocks.
Thanks Ron! Yeah, looking forward to a time when cloud storage, and more specifically retrieval is quicker and more reliable. Delete, delete, delete my friend…
After buying a macbook pro, all I could afford for backup was a 4GB flash drive