I am trying to improve my workflow and was wondering if I could achieve a greater level of performace from Lightroom 4 if I were to create a separate catalog for each time I import.
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I have actually tested this by separating some of my photos (around 1200) in to another catalogue as I was worried about putting all my eggs in one basked (incase of a failure). I found that there was very little performance increase by doing this, at least, that I could see or measure. My catalogue was ~3100 images in size prior to this. One option I can certianly recommend, if you are looking to improve or optimise LR performance, is to have your catalogue on your C: drive (or location LR is installed) and have your image files on a separate physical drive. Going further in to performance, I found that increasing the Cache size to 20GB (or at least 10% of your available space) improved image loading times noticabely. (In LR Settings). Lightroom official stance on LR4 optimisation, well worth 10 minutes of your time: http://helpx.adobe.com/lightroom/kb/optimize-performance-lightroom.html#main_Use_optimal_settings_in_Lightroom |
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Lightroom does run somewhat faster with smaller catalogs. However unless each import you do is more than a few thousand photos, I'd argue you'll see no performance benefit. There are some good reasons for different catalogs (separating "work" and "play," for example), but I would argue that separate catalogs should not be used if performance is your only consideration. |
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Tim Grey, whom I would consider a reliable source, once stated in his newsletter:
This was a little more than one year ago and he referred to recent versions of Lightroom. Before that, apparently there had been a performance drop around 50000 images. The appeal with a single catalog is that you can search across large volumes of images without more-or-less artificial boundaries. Say, you are looking for images of a certain subject, but don't care - or know - when you took any of them. In a monolithic catalog that is trivial, assuming proper keyword tagging. But if you split your catalog into small, pretty arbitrary, chunks with every import in a separate catalog, it will become quite laborious. I have one catalog only most of the time. When I'm on the road with limited disk space for a longer period, I do work with a fresh catalog for that trip. But when I get home I merge it into the main one. |
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I tried this experiment, and found that performance was effectively unchanged with two catalogs, where one was about 1/10 the size of the other. What really made me give the experiment up, though, was all the hidden costs to doing this:
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I can say with 45,000 images in one catalog I haven't seen any apreciable drop in performance. I also subscribe to the approach of having my catalog on my Mac's hard drive and my images on my external Drobo. I hope this helps. |
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