Undo

Aperture: Use Undo/Redo To Compare A Set Of Adjustments

The undo/redo feature of Aperture can be used to quickly compare a set of different adjustments without creating new versions. I show it here using the crop tool, but it works with any of the adjustment tools.

Here is an image I selected and displayed in the viewer:
cropsundo1
I press C to bring up the crop tool and then make a crop, but I don't press A to end the crop yet:
cropsundo2
Now by making several alternate crops either with a new rectangle or by dragging the one that is already there:
cropsundo3
I get Aperture to remember this series of adjustments in its undo buffer.cropsundo4
Finally I press A to accept the last crop and show it:
cropsundo5
Now by pressing command Z to undo and shift command Z to redo I can go back and forth through the crops. This works best in full screen mode, and I can press F at any time to go into or out of full screen.
cropsundo6
When I find the one I like, I just stop and go do something else. The alternatives are forgotten automatically. If I don't like any of then, I press C again and adjust or replace the currently displayed crop.
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Aperture: Undoing Imports

Several times I have imported images into the library when I intended to leave them where they were and reference them. The import pane has a Store Files popup:
unimport1
but it is easy to forget to set this before every import and there is no option to make a default. I suspect that at least in Aperture 1.5.1 this control is unpredictable.

If I imported the images and still have the originals where they were, then this is easy to fix. I just click on the project I imported into and filter by import session:
unimport2
By filtering down to just the erroneously imported images I can select and delete them. Since my originals are still on the hard drive I just redo the import, this time making the correct selections.

If I imported the images but have already deleted them, then the only copies live in the library and I have to get them out. By finding the images with a filter as above I can relocate the masters out of the library and back to where I want them. Selecting the images and using File > Relocate Masters allows me to select the relocation location by folder format and file name:
unimport3
The only hitch is that if I imported a hierarchy using Files > Import > Folders Into A Project, I may not be able to use the file folder presets on the relocate dialog to create the same folder hierarchy that they originally came from. The good news is that the Aperture library tracks these file movements and so once the relocation is complete there is nothing else to do: no need to reimport anything.

A way to avoid this problem entirely with referenced masters is to always import into the Aperture library and then always relocate later. I recommend that workflow because it means that all of the referenced masters are in locations created by Aperture and so can be put back there should the need arise.
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