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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​​

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Why Move to Photo Supreme?

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

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  • 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.

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Before You Start: Preparation Checklist

 

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

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1. Back Everything Up

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

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2. Consolidate Your Files

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

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3. Standardize Metadata

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

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Migration from Lightroom

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

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Step 1: Write Metadata to Files

In Lightroom:

  • Select all photos

  • Use “Save Metadata to File”

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

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Step 2: Export Catalog (Optional)

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

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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

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Capture One users need to take a slightly different approach.

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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

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

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Step 1: Evaluate Your Folder Structure

Folders often represent:

  • Dates

  • Events

  • Projects

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

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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

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Once your images are imported:

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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.

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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

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  • 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

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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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