When it comes to skills that can take your wedding photography to the next level, there is plenty to learn. Effectively cropping your wedding images, removing unwanted objects, and touching up skin tones are just a few of the essential elements for complete photography packages. Yet there is one skill that is even more important than any of those for making your business and workflow fast: knowing how to backup Lightroom catalog.
How to Backup Lightroom Catalog
Because it takes time and dedication to learn a photo editing tool like Adobe Lightroom to deliver professional-level results, we wanted to share our insights. As a company that specializes in photo editing services online, we are experts when it comes to Lightroom and its features. Below, we share more about catalogs in Lightroom and how to back them up for an efficient post-wedding workflow.[ninja-inline id= 19683]
Why You Need a Lightroom Catalog Backup
Just as with any field that relies on digital technology and computers, your photography and final images are susceptible to many issues related to storing those files. Loss of files can mean the loss of hours of work, as well as the loss of income from the wasted time. The following are just a few of the reasons it is so important to have a backup Lightroom catalog. These concerns apply to all digital files, but are particularly important for photos that cannot be replaced:
Unexpected Crashes
Program and computer crashes are never convenient, but they can be particularly disastrous when, as they often do, they come with the loss of files. A backup of your files, including a Lightroom catalog backup, ensures that even if your computer is lost, your photography and work is saved in another location.
Computer Viruses
Along with crashes, computer viruses are another digital danger that is often accompanied by corrupted or lost files. In some cases, these files may be recovered at some level, but the only real protection is having a backup of your Lightroom catalogs and other files that are not attached to your computer.
Physical Damage
Theft, dropping the computer, damage from electrical surges and internal computer issues like an unstable power supply are also threats to your device and files. Precautions can be taken, but a Lightroom backup catalog is a definitive way to secure your files and hours of your hard work.
All of these potential disasters threatening your computer, and your work as a wedding photographer, underscore the need for a backup plan. Knowing how to backup Lightroom catalog not only provides security for your raw and edited files but will also give you peace of mind that your work is safely stored.
How to Backup Lightroom Catalogs
There are several different approaches you can take to create a Lightroom backup of your files depending on how you want to store and organize your backed-up files, and how often you want to make backups of your Lightroom catalog or catalogs. The 2 main strategies for creating a second copy of your valuable photography are manual and automatic backups. Depending on your needs, you may use one or both backup strategies.
How to Backup Lightroom Catalog Manually
Manual backups give you full control over the backup process as well as the timing of Lightroom catalog backups. You may want to use a manual backup while you are in the middle of an important project, as a supplemental backup to your scheduled ones, or to create a third backup of your Lightroom catalogs in an additional location.
Take the following steps to create a manual backup of your Lightroom catalog:
Step 1: Within Lightroom, locate your Catalog Settings menu.
Step 2: From this menu, find the Backup-Catalog option in the General Catalog Settings menu.
Step 3: Choose “When Lightroom Next Exits” as the frequency.
Step 4: Close the Catalog Settings menu and the Lightroom application.
Step 5: The backup of your catalog will start automatically. Be sure to allow it to run through to completion.
How to Backup Lightroom Catalog Automatically
Automatic backups of your photography files mean you do not have to constantly think about your Lightroom backup catalog. Depending on your preferences, you can set Lightroom to create a backup of your catalog at automatic intervals, allowing you to spend more time focusing on your work. These automatic backups help to ensure you always have a second copy of your working files in Lightroom.
Take the following steps to schedule automatic backups of your Lightroom catalog:
Step 1: Within Lightroom, locate your Catalog Settings menu.
Step 2: From this menu, find the Backup-Catalog option in the General Catalog Settings menu.
Step 3: Choose the frequency option that best suits your needs:
- “Every Time Lightroom Exits” creates a backup each time you close the application, ensuring all your changes are consistently backed up.
- “Once a Day, When Exiting Lightroom” makes a new Lightroom catalog backup just the first time you exit Lightroom each calendar day. Only one backup is created per day regardless of how many times you close the program.
- “Once a Week, When Exiting Lightroom” creates a backup of your catalog once a week when you exit the program.
Step 4: Click the “OK” button to apply your new backup settings. The Lightroom files will be backed up based on the settings you chose.
How to Manage Lightroom Catalog Backups
As you are planning how to backup Lightroom photos, you will also need to know how to manage these Lightroom catalog backups. You may find you need to change the location of your backed-up Lightroom catalog or create a secondary backup in a different location. Also, you can change the names of the backup Lightroom catalog or merge Lightroom catalogs into one. In this instance, it can be valuable to understand how Lightroom stores images and where your images and catalogs will be backed up.
How to Change Lightroom Catalog Location
The default location of your backup Lightroom catalog varies slightly based on whether your computer is Windows or a Mac. On a Mac, the Lightroom catalog location for backups on your computer will be within your user files by default. They will automatically be stored in the “Backups” folder that is under “Lightroom” in your “Pictures” folder. On a Windows computer, backups are stored by default to the C: drive, under your user files, under the structure of “Pictures,” “Lightroom” and “Backups.”
In both cases, each backup folder will be labeled with the date and time the Lightroom backup was created. The default locations may not work for your individual file naming and storage system. Or, you may want to save a specific catalog backup to a different location. Either way, it is possible to change a Lightroom catalog location for backups of your photography. Learn more about how to organize folders in this post.
Step 1: Within Lightroom, locate your Catalog Settings menu.
Step 2: From this menu, find the Backup-Catalog option in the General Catalog Settings menu.
Step 3: Choose “When Lightroom Next Exits” as the frequency.
Step 4: Exit Lightroom and wait for the Backup pop up.
Step 5: Locate the backup folder and select choose to redirect where you want the backup file to be stored.
Step 6: Navigate to and select the folder/location where you want the backup file to be stored.
Step 7: Select “New Folder” and give it a name if you would like to save the backup in a separate folder.
Step 8: Click “OK” to change Lightroom catalog location.
You can change the Lightroom catalog location for both manual backups you initiate and automatic backups that are scheduled in Lightroom. This gives you control over how your Lightroom backup catalogs are stored; whether it is a location on your computer, on a separate drive or on a local network.
How to Use Lightroom Rename Catalog
Although you can complete many file management tasks in Lightroom, changing file names must be done outside of the program. This even for your catalog backups. You can, however, use the information provided in Lightroom to rename the catalog to better fit your needs and your filing system.
Locate the Lightroom backup catalog on your computer
Here are the steps to take to locate the Lightroom backup catalog on your computer:
Step 1: In Lightroom, find the Catalog Settings menu.
Step 2: Select the “General” tab from the Catalog Settings menu.
Step 3: Find the Location in the information on this tab.
Step 4: Click on the “Show button” to open the folder on your computer.
Step 5: Close Lightroom completely before renaming the backup catalog.
Identify the files to be renamed
Both the main catalog file and related files must be renamed.
The files you need to rename will be:
- Lightroom Catalog.lrcat
- Lightroom Catalog Previews.lrdata
- Lightroom Catalog Smart Previews.lrdata
Rename the Lightroom backup catalog files
Right-click on the name of the file to be renamed and click on “Rename.”
Edit the name to the new name that you want to use.
Files can be given any name you would like, with the following rules:
- The main file name must be the same for all 3.
- “Previews” and “Smart Previews” should remain at the end of those files’ names.
How to Merge Lightroom Catalogs
After you have become more comfortable with how to backup Lightroom catalog, you may find yourself wanting or needing to combine 2 separate Lightroom catalogs. This is the process of Lightroom merge catalogs. You may have ended up unintentionally creating multiple catalogs by editing a backup catalog instead of the original. Or, you may have purposefully created multiple Lightroom catalogs but now want to consolidate. In either case, merging Lightroom catalogs is possible but can be a complex process.
Make a list of Lightroom catalogs and key information
Step 1: Identify the current Lightroom Catalog from Catalog Settings in Lightroom.
Step 2: Find all other catalogs that need to be merged; each one that has metadata you want to keep.
Step 3: Make a note of catalog contents including the number of photos, and whether they have been duplicated or edited.
Make a plan for merging the Lightroom catalogs
Step 1: Reconnect all files and folders that are missing.
Step 2: Determine whether you will keep one of each duplicate set or send both to the merged catalog.
Merge the Lightroom catalogs
Step 1: Open the catalog you want to have the other catalogs merge into using “Import From Another Catalog.”
Step 2: From the File menu, select “New Catalog.”
Finish the catalog merge process
Step 1: Fix missing photos and previews.
Step 2: Next, clean up duplicates sent to the new Lightroom catalog.
Step 3: Clean up the Folders and Collections panel to reflect the new Lightroom merge catalog.
BONUS for ShootDotEdit Customers
If you are looking for help with the merging/marrying the completed XMP’s you received back from ShootDotEdit, this short tutorial video provided by our partner Jared Platt should answer any/all questions you have regarding the process!
Tips and Best Practices
Learning the process of how to backup Lightroom catalog can seem both complicated and tedious when you are just learning. It is likely you will come across some unexpected challenges and questions as you backup your photos in Lightroom. The following tips and best practices will help you be more successful with Lightroom backup catalogs. This will bring greater success to your post-wedding workflow overall.
Watch Your File Storage Space
Regular backups of your working files in Lightroom are important, but those backed up files can take up a great deal of space on your computer or an external or network drive. In order to prevent excessive files from causing problems with your computer, or running out of space, you can regularly delete your oldest backup files. To store more backups with less space, you can also put them in a Zip folder to compress the file size of those backups.
Vary Your Backup Solutions
Having a backup of your Lightroom catalog on your computer is helpful in case something happens to the working catalog, but it does not prevent all potential loss. The 3-2-1 Backup Rule recommends having not two but three different copies of important files. This would certainly include wedding photos. “2” in the rule stands for using 2 different media types to store those backups, and the “1” is that you should have 1 of those backups stored offsite; away from your home or photography business.
Stick to a Single Working Catalog
Although you can have multiple catalogs of current images within Lightroom, this can make file organization and management difficult. Keep it simple with a single Lightroom catalog from which you can more easily create regular backups and only use multiple catalogs on a temporary basis as needed. A solid backup system is essential to any professional that involves digital work and file storage. With a better understanding of how to backup Lightroom catalog, you can design or improve your personal process for regularly backing up your wedding images.
We understand the importance of an effective backup system for file security. Also to demonstrate your professionalism as a wedding photographer. Also, know there are several other techniques in Lightroom you can learn to assist you in your workflow.