

I'm absolutely convinced they hear every suggestion (and to an extent that I have not seen before in any company, both as a registered user and customer, like here, but definitely neither working at several of them ), so, while it is a good suggestion -perhaps even already in a roadmap!-, we say that, meanwhile, you get the job done by combining -which you find essential and almost unavoidable to do in any advanced project, sooner or later- an external tool. Any developer company has a roadmap, and schedules.

(btw, some of the mentioned photos: Our point is. Some of my photos will be combined with those of another photographer for a magazine article and I wanted to include the © symbol and info for identification purposes if they got the photos confused, that was the reason behind my initial question. I am just a newbie, going to use Photos with Affinity, and I look forward to what I hope will be a good combination after have been dumped by Aperture. Windows or third party options was not being discussed and appreciation for the options, but I just want to stay with Affinity. My (polite!) opinion and suggestion is that Affinity provide it. Affinity does not have a © copyright metadata option Hi All, My initial observation, opinion and suggestion still stands: Most pros I know do it this way and later they also add additional specific image infos for their individual archivement/cataloging purposes, or when dealing with image agencies etc.

directly inside the used cams (all DSLRs I use do support this) and thus such infos are then always already there when you're taking the images, if not stripped out by any software processing afterwards. and sometimes XnViewMP or GraphicConverter on Macs for such tasks, on Win I use instead IrfanView!īTW one of the easiest way to overall deal with this is, to already setup/place copyright infos etc. Writes Artist tag to all files in directory /images.Įxiftool -artist="Phil Harvey" -copyright="2017 Phil Harvey" a.jpg Since no group is specified, EXIF:Artist will be written and all other existing Artist tags will be updated with the new value ("me"). Personally I do mostly use ExifTool from a shell. There are also other tools like XnViewMP which do support to do bulk image batch-processing for applying custom metadata. Don't know if anyone is using that one, it's just one of the Mac related GUI tool references from the ExifTool site.
