![]() It’s easy to accidentally accept the wrong name because the display wasn’t updated yet. Plus, the screen updates are slow so by working in this direction, generally, the order of the photos you’ve already gone thorough will be updating, not the ones ahead. I found it less confusing to work in this direction. As you add names, the photos will be removed from the unnamed section and re-sort. Start at the bottom and work backwards right to left. ![]() ![]() My photos are organized by year/date and if I select the top year folder, I was getting around a thousand pictures which worked pretty well. Lightroom is extremely slow and the screen updates will drive you crazy. Break of the process into chunks of your photos.Besides, the odds that you will someday need to find pictures of people outside of this group are probably low. You can always take another pass at unnamed people later if you feel the need. Lightroom gives you suggestions as you type in a name and your odds that the first name will be the one you want will be higher reducing keystrokes. You will probably have many more photos of your family and close friends and the fewer names you have at the beginning the better. Stick with family members, close friends and famous people. Don’t go crazy naming everyone–resist the temptation.First, let Lightroom run for a while so it can scan through all/most of your photos and detect faces.However, here are some tips to make the process a little easier: If you have a lot of photos, tagging names to faces may seem like a daunting herculean task and it definitely is. It’s got a long way to go to catch up with, say, Google’s Picasa. First off, while Lightroom 6’s new facial recognition feature is pretty cool, you’ll be surprised at how good and how bad it is at guessing faces including seeing faces on things that are not even human! LOL.
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