![]() ![]() ![]() You can find these in a script here but I have found that running the commands in the pic folder I mentioned in the options below are much much faster than running these through python script exif-scripts/setToOldestDate.py For faster processing you can run these commands directly in powershell from the pic folder you are planning. This step is important for the following steps to be successful. Save the oldest_datetime_config in the home folder C:\Users\YOURUSERNAME or in your home directory ~ or in the same folder where you have installed exiftool. Set to oldest date from Exif meta or file name Step 0 - install exiftool from below The EXIF dates of all the selected photos will be updated. There are two options, if you selected more than one thumbnail for updating: "Adjust all photo dates by the same amount" or "Set all photos to the same date and time". No need to type the whole "a.m." or "p.m." thing. to p.m., or vice versa, just select the "a.m." part of the time and type "a" or "p" as appropriate. The Adjust Photo Date dialog will open showing the current Camera Date for the first photo.Įdit the Camera Date and Time as required. In the Properties pane right click on the Camera Date field then select Adjust Date and Time. To decide which to update as a batch, you can either set them all to the same new date-time or you can change the first one and all the rest will be time-shifted by the same amount. Select the thumbnails you want to update. Select the folder containing the photos and they'll appear as a collection of thumbnails. In Picasa select View menu > Properties to display the Properties pane. ![]() Picasa 3, a free photo management tool from Google, will do this and it's nice and quick. is in the format YYYY:MM:DDĪn even more powerful option is ExifTool. Date is specified as yyyy:mm:dd or as dateĪnd time in the format yyyy:mm:dd/hh:mm:ss Instead, the difference is specified as desired date To deal with different months and years having different numbers ofĭays, a simple date-month-year offset would result in unexpected ![]() This is used to fix photos fromĬameras where the date got set back to the default camera date For large date adjustments,Īdjust date by large amounts. Dates can be adjustedīy offsetting by 24 hours or more. Traveling across time zones or DST changes. Taken pictures with the wrong time set on the camera, such as when THM filesĪdjust time by h:mm backwards or forwards. a (Windows only) Rename files with same name but different extension Same as -n, but rename regardless of original name If theĭestination name already exists, a letter or digit is added to The '.jpg' is automatically added to the end of the name. Only renames files whose names are mostly This feature is useful for ordering files from multiple digicams to You can specify 'i' for example to get leading zeros. '%i' will include a sequence number, starting from 1. '%f' as part of the string will include the original file name Is passed to the 'strftime' function for formatting If the optional format-string is not supplied, Uses exif date if present, fileĭate otherwise. dsft Set Exif time to file modification time ft Set file modification time to Exif time Here is an extract from the manual: DATE / TIME MANIPULATION: Let's say you know a certain picture was taken on 16:20 but the current date is showing as 00:15, you can adjust all jpg pictures in a folder to the correct time by doing: jhead -da2017:04:19/16:20-2007:09:01/00:15 *.jpg ![]()
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