iPhoto 6: The Missing Manual
5.12. Keywords
Keywords are descriptive wordslike family, vacation , or kids that you can use to label and categorize your photos, regardless of which album they're in. The beauty of keywords in iPhoto is that they're searchable. Want to comb through all the photos in your library to find every closeup taken of your children during summer vacation? Instead of browsing through multiple photo albums, just perform an iPhoto search for photos containing the keywords kids, vacation, closeup , and summer . You'll have the results in seconds. Keywords are also an integral part of iPhoto's smart albums feature, as described on the previous pages. 5.12.1. Editing Keywords
Apple offers you a few sample entries in the Keywords list to get you rolling: Favorite, Family, Kids, Vacation, Birthday, Movie, and Raw. But these are intended only as a starting point. You can add as many new keywords as you wantor delete any of Apple'sto create a meaningful, customized list:
Note: Be careful about renaming keywords after you've started using them; the results can be messy. If you've already applied the keyword Fishing to a batch of photos, but later decide to replace it with Romantic in your keyword list, all the Fishing photos automatically inherit the keyword Romantic. Depending on you and your interests, this may not be what you intended. It may take some time to develop a really good master set of keywords. The idea is to assign labels that are general enough to apply across your entire photo collection, but specific enough to be meaningful when conducting searches. Here's a general rule of thumb: Use albums to group pictures of specific eventsa wedding , family vacation, or beach party, for example. (You can use film rolls for the same purpose, if you prefer; see Section 5.2.) Use keywords to focus on general characteristics that are likely to appear through your entire photo collectionwords like Mom, Dad, Casey, Robin, Family, Friends, Travel, and Vacation. Suppose your photo collection includes a bunch of photos that you shot during a once-in-a-lifetime trip to Rome last summer. You might be tempted to assign Rome as a keyword. Don'tbecause you probably won't use Rome on anything other than that one set of photos. It would be smarter to create a photo album or film roll called Trip to Rome to hold all those Rome pictures. Use your keywords to tag the same pictures with descriptors like Travel or Family. It also might be useful to apply keywords that describe attributes of the photos themselves , such as Closeup, Landscape, Portrait, and Scenicor even the names of the people in the photos, like Harold, Chris, and Uncle Bert. 5.12.2. Assigning and Unassigning Keywords
iPhoto offers two different methods of applying keywords to your pictures. No matter which method you prefer, keep one fortunate fact in mind: You can apply as many keywords to an individual photo as you like. A picture of your cousin Rachel at a hot dog eating contest in London might bear all these keywords: Relatives, Travel, Food, Humor, and Medical Crises. Later, you'll be able to find that photo no matter which of these categories you're hunting for. 5.12.2.1. Method 1: Drag the picture
One way to apply keywords to photos is, well, to apply the photos to the keywords . If it's not already visible, expose the Keywords panel by clicking the little key button below the Source list (Figure 5-17). Figure 5-17. Left: You apply a keyword by dragging a photo onto the corresponding button.Right: This dialog box is faster if you intend to apply a lot of keywords to a single photo or batch of photos.
Once your keyword buttons are visible, you can drag relevant photos directly onto them, as shown in Figure 5-17. You can drag them one at a time, or you can select the whole batch first, using any of the selection techniques described in Section 5.3.1. This method is best when you want to apply a whole bunch of pictures to one or two keywords. It's pretty tedious , however, when you want to apply a lot of different keywords to a single photo. That's why Apple has given you a second method, described next . Note: If you press the Option key as you drag a thumbnail onto a keyword button, you remove that keyword assignment from the picture. 5.12.2.2. Method 2: Get Info
Highlight a pictures thumbnail and then choose Photos Now click the Keywords tab. Here, you find a simple checklist of all your keywords. Turn on all the checkboxes that correspond to the currently selected photo. The beauty of this system is that you can keep the little Keywords window open on the screen as you move through your photo collection. Each time you click a photoor, in fact, select a group of themthe checkboxes update themselves to reflect the keywords of whatever is now selected. Select some pictures, turn on Travel, select some others, turn on Family, and so on, without ever having to close the palette. (It should be pretty obvious how you can use this method to remove keyword assignments from a certain picture or group of pictures, toojust turn off the checkboxes.) 5.12.3. Viewing Keyword Assignments
Once you've tagged a few pictures with keywords, you can see those keywords in either of two ways:
5.12.4. The Checkmark "Keyword"
You may have noticed that one entry in the keyword panel is not a word, but a symbola small checkmark. You can't edit this particular entry; it's always just a checkmark. The checkmark works just like the other keyword entries, with one exception. Instead of assigning a particular keyword to photos, it flags them with a small checkmark symbol, as shown in Figure 5-19. So what does the checkmark mean? Anything you want it to mean; it's open to a multitude of personal interpretations. The bottom line, though, is that you'll find this marker extremely useful for temporary organizational tasks . Figure 5-18. You might find it easier to keep track of which keywords you've assigned by displaying them right in the photo-viewing area. Choose View |