Looks like no one’s replied in a while. To start the conversation again, simply ask a new question.

Move Select Photos from iCloud to Mac Hard Drive?

I'm new to MacOS and I'm assisting my girlfriend. She has been using iCloud for years to sync photos from her iPhone and iPad. She has a LOT of photos (~13,000). The vast majority of the shots she doesn't need to keep in iCloud but doesn't want to delete them forever. What we'd like to do is move them to her MacBook hard drive. I'd like to end up with ~1000 photos that are in the iCloud library and the rest not part of iCloud but on her hard drive.


Is there an easy way to move photos to the local hard disk? I see that I can drag a photo to hard disk and it creates a copy there but it doesn't delete the original in Photo Library/iCloud. I'd like a move capability instead of copy. Any options or better way of doing this?

MacBook

Posted on Jan 17, 2021 3:45 PM

Reply
Question marked as Best reply

Posted on Jan 18, 2021 2:53 PM

Hi,


The first thing to do is to open the library in Photos.app, open preferences by pressing CMD , [COMMA} or opening preferences from the menu bar Photos>preferences. Check that the box 'Download originals' is selected in the iCloud tab. If optimise setting was previously selected then you'll need to wait until the original files are downloaded.


You should also see that the 'Use as system library is greyed out' button.


Close the photos app. Go to Finder and locate the photos library, then simply create a copy by highlighting the file, press CMD-C, go to where you wish to store the second library, which could be the same folder and then press CMD-V. A copy of the library will then be created. if necessary rename the libraries to make sure it is clear which library is which - you could call them primary and secondary.


If you double click on the original library you should see that the Use as system library button within preferences is still greyed out and within the iCloud tab, Download originals is selected. If you close the library and open the copy library you will see that the Use as system library button is NOT greyed out and in the iCloud tab it will say 'only the system library can sync with iCloud'. In other words, the primary library is sync'd with iCloud and any changes you make will be sync'd across all devices. The secondary library is separate and any changes you make will not be reflected anywhere else.


So you now have a choice. In the primary library you can hide the 12,000 photos as Tony suggested, just leaving the 1,000 important photos visible or you can delete the 12,000 photos and the deletion will be sync'd across all devices leaving just the 1,000 photos in iCloud photos.


Then in the secondary library you can either hide the 1,000 important photos or just delete them leaving the 12,000 photos visible.


BEFORE you delete any photos, I would recommend opening the other library and making sure that all of the photos are visible and not corrupted. Also you should make a backup of the primary library and store on a separate drive (not a NAS drive, ideally a USB connected drive).


You will now have 2 libraries, one that syncs with iCloud and another that is independent. When opening each library you can either double click the library directly or hold down the alt key when double clicking the Photos icon and it will ask you which library to open. It also gives you the option of creating a new library if you wanted to create additional libraries for any reason.

Similar questions

6 replies
Question marked as Best reply

Jan 18, 2021 2:53 PM in response to skD1am0nd

Hi,


The first thing to do is to open the library in Photos.app, open preferences by pressing CMD , [COMMA} or opening preferences from the menu bar Photos>preferences. Check that the box 'Download originals' is selected in the iCloud tab. If optimise setting was previously selected then you'll need to wait until the original files are downloaded.


You should also see that the 'Use as system library is greyed out' button.


Close the photos app. Go to Finder and locate the photos library, then simply create a copy by highlighting the file, press CMD-C, go to where you wish to store the second library, which could be the same folder and then press CMD-V. A copy of the library will then be created. if necessary rename the libraries to make sure it is clear which library is which - you could call them primary and secondary.


If you double click on the original library you should see that the Use as system library button within preferences is still greyed out and within the iCloud tab, Download originals is selected. If you close the library and open the copy library you will see that the Use as system library button is NOT greyed out and in the iCloud tab it will say 'only the system library can sync with iCloud'. In other words, the primary library is sync'd with iCloud and any changes you make will be sync'd across all devices. The secondary library is separate and any changes you make will not be reflected anywhere else.


So you now have a choice. In the primary library you can hide the 12,000 photos as Tony suggested, just leaving the 1,000 important photos visible or you can delete the 12,000 photos and the deletion will be sync'd across all devices leaving just the 1,000 photos in iCloud photos.


Then in the secondary library you can either hide the 1,000 important photos or just delete them leaving the 12,000 photos visible.


BEFORE you delete any photos, I would recommend opening the other library and making sure that all of the photos are visible and not corrupted. Also you should make a backup of the primary library and store on a separate drive (not a NAS drive, ideally a USB connected drive).


You will now have 2 libraries, one that syncs with iCloud and another that is independent. When opening each library you can either double click the library directly or hold down the alt key when double clicking the Photos icon and it will ask you which library to open. It also gives you the option of creating a new library if you wanted to create additional libraries for any reason.

Jan 17, 2021 4:02 PM in response to skD1am0nd

Hi,


Rather than drag the photos to the hard disk I would recommend using the export function which you can find in the menu bar. This will allow you to select whether you wish to export the original file, the edited file and select file type, size, etc. Simply select the photos you wish to export (you can use all the usual ways to select photos as you would with files, highlight the first photo in the list, hold down shift and select the last photo in the list and all of the photos in between will be selected), then click export and the photos will be exported. The photos you've exported should still be selected, you can then press CMD-BACKSPACE and this will delete the photos from the library, which in turn will sync with iCloud. The photos will remain in the recently deleted album for 30 days before being deleted forever.


Rather than export the photos to a separate folder on the HD, you can create a second library which you could use for the 12,000 photos and maintain your primary library with 1,000 photos that are sync'd to iCloud. If you prefer to do it this way, its quite straightforward and I can give you details if you wish?


Thanks

Jan 17, 2021 11:51 PM in response to skD1am0nd

Can I ask why she wants to remove them. Is it a question of space - in which case fine, exporting them and deleting from Photos as described by Russ is fine.


If it just that it makes it difficult to show the ones she likes, then an alternative option is to hide the ones she doesn't want to show (select, right click, hide). This puts them in a hidden folder, and they won't show anywhere else.


On the topic of export - if archiving, it is probably better to export unmodified originals. This will save the file exactly as taken without another compression process that has a small impact on quality.

Jan 18, 2021 9:00 AM in response to Russ New Boy

Thanks Russ. I appreciate the suggestion. I'm a little worried about selecting photos and then forgetting to hit CMD-BACKSPACE before selecting new photos but we can remember that.


Regarding a second library. YES please share info. I didn't realize you could do that at all and it sounds like a much better way to organize all the other photos. Thanks!

Move Select Photos from iCloud to Mac Hard Drive?

Welcome to Apple Support Community
A forum where Apple customers help each other with their products. Get started with your Apple ID.