Again my recent story for what it’s worth.
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See Florian Cortese post above for more details.Ģ) then decide upon another software package. This exports (in fact copies) all your files out to anywhere you wish them to reside and retains your existing file structure. My experience has been to use Aperture Exporter an app found in the app store. export from Aperture to Another, import whilst within Another from Aperture. I have read of many different ways to achieve this i.e. As opposed to the library folder within Aperture. Your files just need to be in a standard file structure so that you can easily find them. My story so far is -ġ) treat the exporting out of Aperture as separate issue. I decided to look at other software and just what I would need to do. Given that we are losing Aperture and at the moment will not be getting a suitable replacement.
It did lack any DAM features then, but this has changed. I will have a hard look at C1, since I’ve used it before Aperture came out in 2005 and was always satisfied with the quality. It also speaks of the sort of arrogance by Adobe, who seem to automatically assume that everybody will switch to Lightroom anyway, so why invest. This was a major hurdle in the past for most people to switch their tools and this was actually low hanging fruits. I mean, it’s not really rocket science to look at what has been done in another tool and just sort of convert this to your own engine. At least you don’t need to start from scratch and will maybe just need to re-adjust the remaining 10% in terms of different RAW interpretation.Īnyway, I’ve always wondered why this approach was not followed earlier by competitors. I have not yet have the chance to try it out myself, but others are reporting that it works well. They do this by sort of “interpreting” your slider settings in Aperture und translate them to what you would have done in C1. I personally can see running Aperture imported to Photos in parallel with an image processor(in my case DXO) exporting edits from Photos and into my DAM and then edit in an image processor and back again into the DAMĬapture One has an Aperture Importer which DOES convert the non destructive adjustments you’ve made. I am not going to migrate to LR for a number of reasons. The program that Florian is talking about is unique, That it automatically does an export. Phase one does not read the Aperture DB either, you see no edits in the migrated DB. Same with Photo Supreme, I export JPEGs, verify the DB (import) and the group them in a Portfolio (Photo Supreme term). These are only for reference in the DAM (Aperture). LR, CaptureOne are also proprietary. When I use DXO with Aperture, the virtual versions ( DXO terminology for non destructive edits) are exported as JPEGS and imported into Aperture and stacked with the original. That info is in Apples format in it’s DB (proprietary). When migrating from Aperture, your edits will not convert. I’m currently using Aperture as my DAM until i finish testing.
A modular solution.I’m looking for something else besides an all in one solution. I’m probably going to use this as a front end, file system in the middle, DXO, maybe Photos or any other app to process the image in the back. So DAM ––File System -– Image Processing App(s) and back thru the system to the DAM. One thing, I’m using a referenced file system in Aperture. Don’t know how it handles a managed DB. (workflow may be different for LR, PShop etc). High amount of granularity, filtering, has a scripting language. Go to Photo Supreme, verify the directory in the file system, asks you to add changes. Add your image processing app to the interface. I use DXO, click on the RAW, click on the DXO icon I’m in the same directory in DXO. Has a menu item for importing Aperture library. You can add your program to it’s interface. It’s a DAM - keeps keywords, ratings, color keying, some smart album data. Another option - Ive been testing Photo Supreme ( WP/?page_id=20).