*Exiftool Mac Os X Install
*Exiftool Mac Os X Download
*Exiftool For Mac Os 10.13
*Exiftool Windows
There are many alternatives to ExifTool for Mac if you are looking to replace it. The most popular Mac alternative is ExifCleaner, which is both free and Open Source.If that doesn't suit you, our users have ranked 31 alternatives to ExifTool and 11 are available for Mac so hopefully you can find a suitable replacement. Photos EXIF Editor makes it possible to edit EXIF information of thousands of photos on your Mac in no time at all. Here are a few reasons which make it a MUST HAVE photo metadata editing tool for your Mac: Reads & writes EXIF, GPS, IPTC, XMP metadata and more. Supports various common image formats including RAW format.
Install exiftool on Mac OSX. June 23, 2017 Amber. App name: exiftool; App description: Perl lib for reading and writing EXIF metadata; App website.
A pile of great photos at hand? But the locations only in your head? Here's how to geotag those photos using Bash and ExifTool.
Ever since I discovered geotagging, I've never gone back — I make sure to geotag all my photos! This way, the information of where I took each photo is contained inside the photo itself.
Most of the time, I rely on my GPS tracker to provide me with a GPS track and then let Bash and ExifTool do all the heavy lifting as described in Why I Geotag My Photos.
But once in a while, I am faced with a problem I thought to belong to the dark ages.
Great photos at hand. But the location information only in my head (and rapidly fading). Because I forgot to bring my GPS Tracker, the photos predate the purchase of the GPS tracker, or any other excuse I could come up with.
So, how to make sure those great photos are properly geotagged?
The good news is that it's fairly easy to geotag a pile of photos without a GPS Track at hand. It's just a bit more cumbersome.
All you really need for the job is Bash and ExifTool. What they are, why it makes sense to only use those tools, and how to install them on a recent Mac is described in article Why I Geotag My Photos.
The rest of this article assumes that you have ExifTool installed and are familiar with Bash to some degree.
Suppose you know that the below photo, called university_of_greenwich.jpg, was actually taken at the University of Greenwich — just as it says on the tin.
You've also located the position of the photo to be 51.483822 N, 0.006572 W with the help of Google Maps by clicking the corresponding location on the map and taking the location information from the small overlay towards the bottom of the window.Adding a GPS Location
The corresponding location information can then be embedded into university_of_greenwich.jpg with exiftool via the following command
In case you only have the location information in degrees minutes seconds (DMS) such as 51 deg 29' 1.76' N, 0 deg 0' 23.66' W, then a free online conversion tool comes in handy to convert it to decimal degree (DD) 51.483822 N, 0.006572 W.
At this point, the location information in university_of_greenwich.jpg isAdding a GPS Date Stamp
The above step adds the GPS location information to the photo but leaves the GPS Date Stamp untouched. It's only a nuance. But it shows in Preview on a Mac. And it's easy to fix given the date stamp of when the photo was take is available.
The following command copies the modified date of the photo into the GPS Date Stamp
At this point, the location information in university_of_greenwich.jpg is
In case all EXIF dates (except for the GPS Date Stamp) are behind by one year, they can all be adjusted via
Here, the general input format for AllDates is [Y]{1,4}:mm:dd HH:MM:SS with additional nuances and specialties available. Fill your boots!
Note that in order to also shift the GPS Date Stamp, simply repeat the above step of copying the modified date of the photo into the GPS Date Stamp.
If the above steps are too much hassle then you can also copy all EXIF tags from source.jpg to target.jpg via
Note that this operation merely copies the metadata. It does not adjust it. This means that metadata such as aperture, resolution, and size do not get updated in the process. Hence, this is most useful when working with identical photos.
All GPS tags in university_of_greenwich.jpg can be deleted via
All EXIF tags in university_of_greenwich.jpg can be deleted via
The command is also one of the pillars of my Bash script that I use to prepare all images for publication. This way, I Leave No Trace and don't litter the internet with additional and potentially harmful EXIF tags.
ExifTool plays it safe by default and keeps a copy of each original file around. This is why after updating university_of_greenwich.jpg, a new file called university_of_greenwich.jpg_original suddenly appears. This can be suppressed by enabling in place updates via flag
When working with larger batches, exiftool can be incentivised to show progress via flag
Moreover, the verbosity of exiftool can be increased via flag
The full documentation of ExifTool can be found on the corresponding exiftool Application Documentation. Or right inside your Bash shell via man exiftool. All you really need is Bash!
Bash and ExifTool get the job done for me when it comes to a pile of photos for which I want to get the locations out of my head and inside the photos. Text book geotagging.
Think this is all rubbish and I should much rather use the-one-special-tool-that-really-does-it-all-and-is-also-clearly-better-than-everything-else?! Feel free to send me an email at dominic AT how-hard-can-it.be and teach me something new!
As always, prove me wrong and I'll buy you a pint!
A pile of great photos at hand? But the locations only in your head? Here's how to geotag those photos using Bash and ExifTool.
Ever since I discovered geotagging, I've never gone back — I make sure to geotag all my photos! This way, the information of where I took each photo is contained inside the photo itself.
Most of the time, I rely on my GPS tracker to provide me with a GPS track and then let Bash and ExifTool do all the heavy lifting as described in Why I Geotag My Photos.
But once in a while, I am faced with a problem I thought to belong to the dark ages.
Great photos at hand. But the location information only in my head (and rapidly fading). Because I forgot to bring my GPS Tracker, the photos predate the purchase of the GPS tracker, or any other excuse I could come up with.
So, how to make sure those great photos are properly geotagged?
The good news is that it's fairly easy to geotag a pile of photos without a GPS Track at hand. It's just a bit more cumbersome.
All you really need for the job is Bash and ExifTool. What they are, why it makes sense to only use those tools, and how to install them on a recent Mac is described in article Why I Geotag My Photos.
The rest of this article assumes that you have ExifTool installed and are familiar with Bash to some degree.
Suppose you know that the below photo, called university_of_greenwich.jpg, was actually taken at the University of Greenwich — just as it says on the tin.Exiftool Mac Os X Install
You've also located the position of the photo to be 51.483822 N, 0.006572 W with the help of Google Maps by clicking the corresponding location on the map and taking the location information from the small overlay towards the bottom of the window.Adding a GPS Location
The corresponding location information can then be embedded into university_of_greenwich.jpg with exiftool via the following command
In case you only have the location information in degrees minutes seconds (DMS) such as 51 deg 29' 1.76' N, 0 deg 0' 23.66' W, then a free online conversion tool comes in handy to convert it to decimal degree (DD) 51.483822 N, 0.006572 W.
At this point, the location information in university_of_greenwich.jpg isAdding a GPS Date Stamp
The above step adds the GPS location information to the photo but leaves the GPS Date Stamp untouched. It's only a nuance. But it shows in Preview on a Mac. And it's easy to fix given the date stamp of when the photo was take is available.
The following command copies the modified date of the photo into the GPS Date Stamp
At this point, the location information in university_of_greenwich.jpg is
In case all EXIF dates (except for the GPS Date Stamp) are behind by one year, they can all be adjusted via
Here, the general input format for AllDates is [Y]{1,4}:mm:dd HH:MM:SS with additional nuances and specialties available. Fill your boots!
Note that in order to also shift the GPS Date Stamp, simply repeat the above step of copying the modified date of the photo into the GPS Date Stamp.
If the above steps are too much hassle then you can also copy all EXIF tags from source.jpg to target.jpg via
Note that this operation merely copies the metadata. It does not adjust it. This means that metadata such as aperture, resolution, and size do not get updated in the process. Hence, this is most useful when working with identical photos.
All GPS tags in university_of_greenwich.jpg can be deleted via
All EXIF tags in university_of_greenwich.jpg can be deleted via
The command is also one of the pillars of my Bash script that I use to prepare all images for publication. This way, I Leave No Trace and don't litter the internet with additional and potentially harmful EXIF tags.Exiftool Mac Os X Download
ExifTool plays it safe by default and keeps a copy of each original file around. This is why after updating university_of_greenwich.jpg, a new file called university_of_greenwich.jpg_original suddenly appears. This can be suppressed by enabling in place updates via flag
When working with larger batches, exiftool can be incentivised to show progress via flagExiftool For Mac Os 10.13
Moreover, the verbosity of exiftool can be increased via flag
The full documentation of ExifTool can be found on the corresponding exiftool Application Documentation. Or right inside your Bash shell via man exiftool. All you really need is Bash!
Bash and ExifTool get the job done for me when it comes to a pile of photos for which I want to get the locations out of my head and inside the photos. Text book geotagging.
Think this is all rubbish and I should much rather use the-one-special-tool-that-really-does-it-all-and-is-also-clearly-better-than-everything-else?! Feel free to send me an email at dominic AT how-hard-can-it.be and teach me something new!Exiftool Windows
As always, prove me wrong and I'll buy you a pint!