![]() You can do this by selecting a photo or group of photos and “⌘ [” (left or right bracket). Typically when I begin I like to fly through and rotate any photos to the correct orientation. You can increase or decrease the thumbnail size with “⌘ +” (plus or minus). It’ll open a new window with all of your files saved locally. ![]() Take the photos folder (or the event folder as a whole) and drag to the Fileloupe icon in the menubar. Now that the files are saved safely to your hard drive, close your previous sessions of Fileloupe and work with the files saved to your computer. You can click and drag the files from Fileloupe into your new folder if there are under 1000 files (OSX limit). ![]() In the ‘video’ folder I’ve created, right click > Paste. Hit the ‘Movie’ filter, Select All, right click > ‘Copy Files’. It may take a bit if there’s a bunch of photos, depending on your SD reader speed. In the ‘photos’ folder I’ve created, I right click > Paste. ![]() I select all the files (⌘ A) then right click on a file > ‘Copy Files’. In Fileloupe we can hit the ‘Image’ filter at the top first, which will filter out everything but the photos. Make separate folders for the photos & video. From there I either create a folder for each camera used, or if only one camera was used, move directly to the next step. I keep my folder system super organized with a date & label of each filming activity I do (YY-MM-DD_ActivityDescription). Next comes copying the files onto the computer. Even if I’ve taken 3,000 files, Fileloupe will ignore the subsequent 100GOPRO, 101GOPRO, and 102GOPRO folders. It’ll load all of the contents of the SD card into a single Fileloupe viewer. Once the card is inserted, I drag the DCIM folder directly onto the Fileloupe Helper Icon in the menu bar. To begin, I use an external SD card reader, rather than USB to the GoPro, so the card can show up as an external device on the computer. The basic goal is to quickly reach the single best photo from a set of 2-10,000 photos. Most of the time it consists of me going surfing or biking, then saving the files to my computer in an orderly fashion, followed by quickly breezing through all of the photos to find the standout shots. The example I’m going to walk through is a typical GoPro ‘session’ whereas I have a single film activity (day of surfing) from a single camera being loaded onto my computer. This makes it so you have a quick shortcut to Fileloupe at all times. I like to click ‘Always’ for Show Fileloupe icon in menu bar. In the first ‘Window’ preferences screen, I enjoy having my Window Theme & Full Screen Theme be in Dark Mode, but you may like light. Open Fileloupe, go to Fileloupe > Preferences. Quickly, before we proceed, there’s a couple preferences to set to get yourself setup. It’ll give you a sense of how this program can be used to increase speed & efficiency of locating & working with your files. I’m going to walkthrough my typical GoPro file management & viewing workflow from GoPro SD card to Editing photos/video using Fileloupe. It handles video extremely well (seamless GoPro 4K playback).You can have as many viewers open simultaneously.You can load files from multiple folders in one viewer.It’s made specifically to be a viewer and not mess with your files.If you’ve ever used Adobe Bridge, it’s similar in viewing style & layout but has a few key differences/benefits. It does an incredible job of loading thousands of GoPro video and image files to a gallery view in seconds from multiple folders. Fileloupe is for Apple Users Only (FYI) – Get it hereįileloupe is a new app built specifically to speed up the process of viewing GoPro content.
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