Photo Import & Export Master Guide
A beginner-friendly workflow guide to help you organize photos, import correctly, avoid losing files, and export images that stay sharp for social media, clients, and print.
Why File Organization Matters
Many photographers lose photos or waste hours searching for files because they never created a simple system from the beginning. A clean workflow saves time, protects your images, and prevents expensive mistakes like overwriting files.
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This structure keeps sessions organized and prevents files from
getting scattered across your computer.
Why Use an SSD
External SSD drives dramatically improve photo workflow speed and reliability.
Popular beginner-friendly SSD drives include:
- Samsung T7
- SanDisk Extreme Portable SSD
- Crucial X9
Importing Photos Into Lightroom
Understanding Import Options:
- Copy – best when importing from an SD card
- Add – best when files already exist on your drive
- Move – rarely recommended
Catalog Management
Your Lightroom catalog does not store your photos. It stores instructions about your edits and file locations.
YourBusinessName_MasterCatalogAvoid multiple confusing catalogs like:
Lightroom Catalog Lightroom Catalog 2 Final Catalog
Avoiding Lost Files
Do not move or rename your photo folders using your computer’s file browser (Finder on Mac or File Explorer on Windows). Lightroom keeps track of where your photos are stored. If you move the files outside of Lightroom, the program will lose track of them and show a “Missing File” error.
⚠️ Important Warning
If you delete your photo files from your computer, external drive, or memory card, they will also disappear from Lightroom.
Lightroom may still show a small preview of the image, but the original photo will be gone and you will no longer be able to export or edit that image.
Always make sure your photos are safely stored on your computer or external drive before deleting anything.
Exporting Photos
Saving Files With Layers
When editing in Photoshop, saving files with layers allows you to return and modify adjustments later.
- PSD – keeps all layers
- TIFF – supports layers and high quality
Saving Images With Transparent Backgrounds
Only certain file formats support transparency.
- PNG – best for logos or overlays
- PSD – keeps transparency and layers
JPEG files cannot contain transparent backgrounds.
Image Size vs Print Size
| Print Size | Recommended Pixels |
|---|---|
| 8×10 | 2400 × 3000 |
| 11×14 | 3300 × 4200 |
| 16×24 | 4800 × 7200 |
| 24×36 | 7200 × 10800 |
💡 Client Print Size Tip
If you export images around 4000–5000 pixels on the long edge, clients can comfortably print large images while maintaining excellent detail.
- 8×10 prints — excellent quality
- 11×14 prints — very sharp
- 16×20 prints — still excellent
- 20×30 prints — good quality depending on viewing distance
If a client requests very large wall art (24×36 or larger), export the full-resolution file.
