![]() I'm sure the plugin would work, but I'm kind of impressed by the simplicity of Adobe's solution.Įdit 2: I forgot to point out, this only works if you haven't changed the file names. Note: I would triple check that everything is there, and make sure it's the original RAW file, not a jpg (if you're not well versed in Lightroom's export panel, I would have a good look at it). So you can double check that everything is there, and then delete the old folder. So even though you just created a whole folder of duplicates, that new folder shouldn't have any. All you do is use the export function to export all your files, in original format, to a new folder, but you use Lightrooms built in duplicate detection function to only copy single files. Scroll to the bottom of the article, and click on the link to the previous week's article. Give it a shot, let us know how it works!Įdit: I guess I should have read the article more closely. So long as you backup your files just in case, you really don't have anything to lose. Here's a recent review of a plugin called Duplicate Finder. I still had to do a little manual cleanup, but it saved me a lot of time. It did a decent job, didn't delete anything it shouldn't (I backed up everything just in case), and got most the duplicates. ![]() ![]() I really can't remember what the plugin was called, I think it was the one listed below, but really can't say for sure. A couple years ago I had a database SNAFU and had several hundred photos duplicated. ![]()
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