• Pictures can be organized by one or more mechanisms • Images can be organized into folders, which may correspond to file-system folders. • Images may be organized into albums, which may be distinct from folders or file-system folders. • Albums may be organized into collections, which may not be the same as a folder hierarchy. • Grouping or sorting by date, location, and special photographic metadata such as exposure or f-stops if that information is available. See
Exif for example. • Images can appear in more than one album • Albums can appear in more than one collection • Grouped or stacking of images within an album, by date, time, and linking copies to originals. • Adding and editing titles and captions • Simple or sophisticated search engines to find photos • Searching by keywords, caption text, metadata, dates, location or title • Searching with logical operators and fields, such as "(Title contains birthday) and (keywords contain cake) not (date before 2007)" • Separate backing up and exporting of metadata associated with photos. • Retouching of images (either destructively or non-destructively) • Editing images in third-party graphical software and then re-incorporating them into the album automatically • Stitching to knit together
panoramic or tiled photos • Grouping of images to form a
slideshow view • Exporting of slideshows as
HTML or
Flash presentations for web deployment • Synchronizing of albums with web-based counterparts, either third-party (such as
Flickr), or application specific (such as
Lightroom or
Phase One Media Pro). • Retention of Exif, IPTC and XMP metadata already embedded in the image file itself == Two categories of image organizers ==