Aperture 3: 4 months on, living with Aperture
Aperture 3 vs. Aperture 2: STUNNED!! - part 3
Aperture is worrying me part 2 - with numbers
First processing with my default preset: MBP: 4 mins 12 seconds
MP: 6 mins 5 seconds Cropping all photos: MBP: 7 mins 8 seconds
MP: 9 mins 2 seconds What this means in real terms is that If I import 130 RAW files with my standard presets then crop them all its going to take me approximately: import: 1m 28s
presets: 6m 5s
cropping: 5m
to apply crops: 9m 2s TOTAL: 21m+ it would be 4 minutes quicker on my MBP than the MP!! I HOPE this is due to SL and not graphics card. Assuming that that I can match the MBP times by changing the MP to SL it is still taking me a LONG time. I’m going to run the same test on an AP2 library later today to see whether I THINK its taking longer or whether it actually is. A few additional tests showed that to make changes to all 130 files (most adjustments) takes the 9 minutes on the MP so the only other time saving would seem to be to try and get it to apply all the adjustments I need at one time (which in the case of cropping alone is impossible) So my next steps are: 1) Run files through AP2 and test results
2) install SL on MP and re-test on AP3 and AP2
3) Look through steps of workflow to see if improvements can be made. So far though it would seem that these times are not going to change greatly as long as Aperture WAITS to start processing once I have finished working, 14 minutes to crop 130 files IMO is too long! watch this space….
Aperture 3 is worrying me :(
2) Its a fundamental change in AP3
3) My failing graphics card is the problem
4) some conflict/change/problem I’m unaware of. As a test I’m going to try the same tests on two sets of identical files one on my MP running Leopard and one on my MBP running SL. Just to see if that throws up and differences. The result of all this is that its shaken my confidence in Aperture, things that used to take me 5 or 6 minutes are not taking 10-12 minutes and its really starting to impact my workflow as a whole :( I hope its a software/system problem and not a fundamental change to the way Aperture works because if it is then my 3 year love affair with Aperture may be heading for rocky ground.
The final 5 in my Beautiful Baby 2010 competition
Aperture 3 guides & case studies coming very soon
Apple Releases Aperture 3.01
About Aperture 3.0.1
This update improves overall stability and addresses a number of issues in Aperture 3, including:
- Upgrading libraries from earlier versions of Aperture
- Importing libraries from iPhoto
- Importing photos directly from a camera
- Memory usage when processing heavily-retouched photos
- Face recognition processing
- Adding undetected faces using the Add Missing Face button
- Printing pages containing multiple images
- Printing photos and contact sheets with borders and metadata
- Editing photos using an external editor
- Display of images with Definition and Straighten adjustments applied
- Zooming photos in the Viewer and in the Loupe using keyboard shortcuts
- Accessing Aperture libraries on a network volume Selecting and moving pins on the Places map
- Adding and editing custom locations using the Manage My Places window
- Switching between masters when working with RAW+JPEG pairs.
This update is recommended for all users of Aperture 3.
For detailed information on this update, please visit this website: http://support.apple.com/kb/TS2518
5 reasons to make your own mind up about Aperture 3 vs. Lightroom 3
Reasons to choose Aperture 1) Aperture must be better because it has more vowels which means its name is easier so therefore its software must be better 2) Using Aperture is one of your 5 a day fruit and vegetables because its made by Apple! 3) Aperture is an anagram of “U pear tre” so it contains apples and pears 4) Every Aperture disc is sprinkled with unicorn dust by Steve Jobs himself 5) Aperture works better with my camera because that has an Aperture as well
The real thing to do is to choose whichever piece of software you prefer and works better for you it is as simple as that, read the right ups, and then download both demos and have a play with them. Pick which everyone is more enjoyable to use.
Aperture 3: Library Merging (sublime new feature!)
2) I then exported the project as a library:
3) This created a library called Pippa, I exported it directly onto an external HD that I could then hook up to my MBP
4) The client viewed the files, was very happy, spent some money :D (making me very happy!) and off they went
5) I opened up the master library, clicked on import and selected the library on the external HD:

Aperture 3 automatically recognises that this matches one of the projects and asks if I want to merge the two. I click yea and it basically updates the existing project to match the one I’m importing including edits, selections albums etc.
So instead of creating 2 projects and one new library (under Aperture 2) and having to manually delete the old project after importing the updated on, all I create now is one new library and the rest is taken care of by Aperture. Using this feature with managed libraries (as I always do) works so well. For anyone who hasn’t tried managed libraries I urge you to try as in my opinion the list of pros for this just keeps getting longer! This is one f those small features than would barely make the list of 200 but for me this is saving me huge amounts of time and HD space and is a great feature. Every day I’m finding that some of Apertures less marketable new features are the ones that are making a massive difference to the way I work and making Aperture an even stronger product.Aperture 3: What would you like to know?
CASE STUDY: Wedding workflow
CASE STUDY: Event photography
GUIDE: High key white background with Aperture 3
GUIDE: Sharpening and blurring brushes for DOF control
GUIDE: The power of presets Those are the ones I have in mind at the moment, please tweet me @mepphoto or leave me a comment if there is anything specific you’d like to know about or like me to include in any of the things above.





