![]() ![]() This was a little painful, so it makes much more sense to select the images you want to search (i.e., select all in a collection or via the Library Filter) and then just search on the selected photos. ![]() However, when clicking OK to this dialog and going to the Smart Collection it creates I had to wait a few minutes more for it to populate.Īt around 28,000 images my system started to want more RAM and things got drastically slower for a few minutes while the OS paged out memory to disk to give the app more RAM to play with. This app does a lot of searches so the performance will depend on your computer and hard drive speed, but with a pretty speedy configuration I let it run on all 35,233 of the photos in my Lightroom 4.2 catalog and as you can see it took over 23 minutes. It’s a little spendy for us in the US, but given the amount of time it takes to find duplicates manually I was happy to pay the “donation”. ![]() #Adobe duplicate photo finder full#It’s freeware demo only finds the first 20 duplicates, so you need to register it to get the full working version. Here’s a little video from the author of how it works: Out of desperation I did a web search and found a handy little plug-in called Duplicate Finder. In short, it was a mess and I wasn’t looking forward to manually sorting out the duplicates of hundreds of files! This happened partially due to using Eye-Fi along with the cameras built-in Wi-Fi support as well as the traditional Import feature of Lightroom. I’ve been working on an article behind the scenes lately and in the process of doing so I accidentally ended up with a lot of duplicate photos in my Lightroom catalog. ![]()
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