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Migrating to Photo Supreme

A Guide for Lightroom, Capture One, and Folder-Based Users

Switching photo management systems can feel daunting, especially when your archive spans years (or decades). Whether you're coming from Lightroom, Capture One, or a simple folder-based workflow, migrating to Photo Supreme can bring powerful cataloging, flexible metadata control, and long-term scalability. This guide walks you through the migration process step by step, helping you preserve your work, avoid common pitfalls, and get the most out of your new setup

Why Move to Photo Supreme?

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Photo Supreme is a Digital Asset Management (DAM) tool designed for photographers who want:

  • Robust keywording and cataloging

  • Independence from editing software

  • Strong metadata standards (IPTC/XMP)

  • Cross-platform flexibility

  • Long-term archive stability
     

Unlike editing-focused tools, Photo Supreme is built primarily for organizing and managing large collections efficiently.

Before You Start: Preparation Checklist

 

Before migrating, take time to clean and standardize your existing library:

1. Back Everything Up

Create at least one full backup of your photo library and catalog files.

2. Consolidate Your Files

If your photos are scattered across multiple drives or folders, consider organizing them into a logical structure first.

3. Standardize Metadata

Ensure your keywords, ratings, and captions are properly written to files (XMP sidecars or embedded metadata).

Migration from Lightroom

Lightroom users typically have the most structured data, which makes migration smoother.

Step 1: Write Metadata to Files

In Lightroom:

  • Select all photos

  • Use “Save Metadata to File”

This ensures your keywords, ratings, and captions are stored outside the catalog.

Step 2: Export Catalog (Optional)

You can export a catalog subset if you don’t want to migrate everything.

Step 3: Import into Photo Supreme

  • Open Photo Supreme

  • Use “Import Folder” or “Catalog from Disk”

  • Let it read metadata from files
     

What Transfers Well:

  • Keywords (hierarchical)

  • Ratings and labels

  • Captions and descriptions
     

What Doesn’t Transfer:

  • (Smart) Collections; these need to be recreated

  • Editing adjustments; those stay in Lightroom
     

Migration from Capture One

Capture One users need to take a slightly different approach.

Step 1: Enable Metadata Sync

Ensure metadata is written to XMP sidecars:

  • Enable “Auto Sync Sidecar XMP”
     

Step 2: Regenerate Previews (Optional)

This helps ensure thumbnails are clean during import.
 

Step 3: Import into Photo Supreme

  • Use folder import

  • Photo Supreme will read XMP data
     

Important Notes:

  • Albums/projects won’t transfer

  • Color tags may not map perfectly

  • Keyword hierarchies may need cleanup
     

Migration from Folder-Based Workflows

If you’ve been organizing photos using only folders, this is your chance to upgrade your system.

Step 1: Evaluate Your Folder Structure

Folders often represent:

  • Dates

  • Events

  • Projects

These can later become categories or labels in Photo Supreme. Descriptive folder and/or names can be converted into Catalog Labels. 

Step 2: Add Basic Metadata (Optional but Recommended)

Use a tool to batch-apply:

  • Keywords

  • Copyright info

  • Descriptions
     

Step 3: Import Folders

  • Import your top-level photo directories

  • Let Photo Supreme index everything
     

Step 4: Build Your Catalog Structure

Now the real power begins:

  • Create categories independent of folders

  • Tag images across multiple themes
     

Post-Migration: Organizing in Photo Supreme

Once your images are imported:

1. Build a Category Hierarchy

Think in terms of:

  • People

  • Locations

  • Events

  • Subjects
     

2. Refine Keywords

Clean duplicates and inconsistencies.
 

3. Use Labels and Collections

Recreate your previous organizational logic—but more flexibly.

4. Verify Metadata Integrity

Spot-check images to ensure everything transferred correctly.
 

Common Pitfalls to Avoid
 

  • Skipping metadata export → leads to lost keywords and ratings

  • Relying on collections/albums → these don’t transfer

  • Importing without backups → always protect your originals

  • Ignoring keyword cleanup → small inconsistencies become big problems later
     

Tips for a Smooth Transition

  • Start with a small test library before migrating everything

  • Keep your old system until you're fully confident

  • Use consistent naming conventions

  • Take advantage of Photo Supreme’s category system early
     

Final Thoughts

Migrating to Photo Supreme isn’t just about switching tools; it’s about upgrading how you think about your photo archive. Where Lightroom and Capture One focus on editing, Photo Supreme excels at long-term organization and retrieval. Once your catalog is properly structured, you’ll gain a level of control and flexibility that’s hard to match.
 

Take your time, plan carefully, and your migration will pay off for years to come.

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