![]() I wish Apple would pick this up (it was a feature of Aperture) as I find it useful to my review process. Subsequent culls are made post-import using either Photos or RAW Power. RAW Power has implemented a star rating system, and the ability to filter on those ratings. Pre-import, the thumbnail contact sheet on the Photos import screen allow me to eliminate obvious rejects from the import- like the 50 shots of the bottom of my camera bag when the X100V powered itself on, or the ten shots I made in “manual mode” thinking it was aperture priority. (FWIW, I do occasionally delete an obviously bad image using the camera - but I don’t work very hard towards doing so in the field.) Happy to discuss my approach and workflow in more detail. If you have specific reasons doing this I’m open to (honest and friendly) debate. It’s possible, but my unsolicited advice is to rethink that workflow as it reduces margin for error. To address this question there are image culling apps available but I’ve never used one.Ĭulling photos directly on cards? I don’t think it’s a great practice myself, but you can delete individual files from within the Files app. My main concern is how easy is it to cull photos on memory cards directly? ![]() I am guessing, but can not confirm,that you could do the same with the less expensive 4-in-1 hub by connecting an external card reader and external drive to the USB Ports (one A, one C) on that device. If power is a concern you can power and charge the iPad through the dock USB-C port but this would force you to use the USB A port for your external drive. The dock also provides a MicroSD card reader, an HDMI port and a headphone jack. Using a HyperDrive 6-in-1 USB-C Hub for iPad Pro & iPad Air –, I was able to tranfer files from the built-in card reader directly to an external drive - in my case a SanDisk Extreme SSD - connected to either the USB-A or USB-C port on the dock. I was unable to do a direct camera card to external drive transfer by using the second USB-C port on the Smart Keyboard because that port is power only. I’ll try it later on and report back if I think about it. While I can (physically) connect two USB C devices to my iPad Pro while using the Smart Keyboard I’ve never tested this to see if can connect two external volumes simultaneously. Outcome satisfactory - I’m going to miss that in-store option! I sent those images off to the printer while on a break and picked them up after work (when Costco printed 16x20 in-store), mounted them using the tailgate as a work surface and submitted them (an hour before deadline) on my way home. ![]() I’d be lying if I didn’t mention that I have done quick-and-dirty edits on the iPhone while working against a salon deadline. For big, archival prints I work closely with my local lab to avoid problems but most of my competition/salon/local expo printing is done online. ![]() I currently use a lab for all printing beyond 4圆 (which I can do on a Canon Selphy.) I’m considering dipping my toes back into the ink reservoirs…because I don’t learn. On the rare occasion I’m masking, I’ll usually connect the iPad and Pencil to the Mac to use either Affinity Photo (which I can also run natively on iPad) or Luminar Neo. My primary software for this is RAW Power. I do most of my culling, cropping and global edits using an iPad - usually a Pro 12.9, but sometimes (in the field) using an older Mini. I use my iPad for initial culling but still prefer Lightroom Classic on the Mac for image processing I do wonder about printing on the Canon (are there even drivers for IOS), but this is not a major issue since I can use the old MBP for just printing. Especially importing RAW files and the LR software experience on both systems (IOS vs macOS). So the question really relates to the practicality of using an Ipad (vs MB). Similar price gets me a new Ipad Pro 12.9 inch 0.5 or 1tb storage. I could do like-for-like and get a new Macbook (not Pro) with M1 or M2 chip, plus a standard base model Ipad. It also has primary storage for images as well as being the main house computer for docs, admin, banking, and the age as well as no further macOS system updates (security!) is the main reason for retiring it. Processing a few hundred images per year (Canon RAW). I currently use the MBP for editing (Lightroom) and hi-res printing (Canon Pixma Pro 100 S). I have a 2013 Macbook Pro and an old Ipad.
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