10/8/2023 0 Comments Restore my photos![]() Check Export selected photos only and leave the other checkboxes unchecked. Select a temporary location, such as the Desktop, and give the exported catalog a name such as “Transfer.lrcat”. Select the photos and go to File menu > Export as Catalog.(If the backup catalog is quite old, you may have moved some of the files). Double check that they’re not marked as missing, and if they are, fix the broken links. Find the photos you’d like to transfer to your normal working catalog.Double-click on the *.lrcat file to open it into Lightroom.(If you’re using Lightroom 5 or earlier, copy rather than move.) Move the backup *.lrcat file to a temporary location, such as the Desktop. ![]() The *.lrcat file appears next to the zip file. Double-click on the zip file to decompress it.(If you’re using Lightroom 5 or earlier, the catalog won’t be zipped.) The backups are stored in dated subfolders, with the zip file named to match your catalog name, to make them easy to identify. Find your most recent backup in your Backups folder.Instead, you can restore just the settings for specific photos. Last week, we discussed the options for fixing mistakes using Undo, History and restoring an entire backup catalog.īut what if you only want to restore part of the backup catalog? Perhaps you accidentally synchronized Develop settings across a folder of photos, or you accidentally removed specific photos from your catalog. If you’ve worked on other photos since the backup was created, you probably won’t want to restore the entire backup catalog, as you’d lose the other work you’ve done.
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