https://youtu.be/nc7F_qv3eI8?is=YXNp_AJDSI4NDld7
Many professional photographers rely on a multi-pass culling strategy to avoid getting overwhelmed by thousands of files. [1]
- The Technical Pass (The Delete Phase): Go through your grid view rapidly and flag or delete the clear rejects (blurry shots, closed eyes, extreme over/underexposure). You are not looking for the best shot here; you are just removing the unusable ones. [1, 2, 3]
- The Subjective Pass (The Pick Phase): Zoom in on the remaining images. Use the “Pick” flag (or star ratings) to highlight the images that catch your eye, tell the story, and meet your quality standard. [1, 2, 3]
- The Tie-Breaker Pass (The Refine Phase): When you have near-identical frames, use side-by-side comparison tools to pick the single best shot of the sequence. [1, 2, 3]
“Culling In” vs. “Culling Out”
- Culling Out: Looking at every image and deciding what to throw away. This can sometimes lead to decision fatigue, as you are analyzing every single file. [1, 2]
- Culling In: Searching specifically for the “Yes” photos that you absolutely love and want to edit, intentionally tuning out the mediocre frames. [1]
Essential Software and Tools
Having the right tools is the secret to getting through a culling session without your eyes glazing over. [1]
- Adobe Lightroom: The industry standard for manually filtering, flagging, and rating photos.
- Photo Mechanic: Widely used by event and sports photographers for instant image rendering and ultra-fast culling.
- AI Culling Tools: Software like Aftershoot or Lightroom’s AI features can automatically sort through thousands of photos in minutes to remove duplicates and blurs, leaving you to make the final creative decisions. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
If you are currently facing a backlog of images, tell me:
- How many images are you trying to cull?
- What type of shoot is it (e.g., wedding, travel, street, studio)?
- What software (if any) are you currently using?
I can provide specific keyboard shortcuts and a tailored workflow to speed up your process.
