Digital Decluttering: Photo Consolidation by the Numbers (Premium)

This morning, I finished cleaning up the photo collection I fully consolidated last week after several months of work. It's time to reflect on an awful job that, in many ways, will never really be done: I still have scanned photos to organize and incorporate into the collection, there are videos to figure out, and I'm sure I'll come across more phone backups and other photos and files as I start cleaning up the NAS.

But that's for another day. Today, I'm going to briefly look at what I accomplished.

As I write this, the consolidated photo collection is comprised of over 138,400 files and takes up 452 GB on disk.

Looking at the collection decade by decade, there are over 600 photos from the 1970s, over 5100 from the 1980s, over 5800 from the 1990s, almost 27,000 from the 2000s, and over 55,000 from the 2010s. This isn't on the chart, but there are over 44,000 photos in the collection from 2021 through January 2024, so it looks like the growth is going to continue. (Though I'd imagine it slows with the kids out of the house.)

Looking at the collection by year, there are some trends, the most obvious being the massive growth in photo volume over time.

The first notable bump was in 1985, when the number of photos taken year-over-year (YOY) doubled to 1092. That makes sense: I got my own SLR camera for Christmas in December 1984 and was off to the races.

1993 was another big bump, and that also makes sense: We moved to Arizona that year and visited Europe for the second time, and Paris and Ireland for the first time, so there were many new experiences to record.

But the massive growth starts in 2000 when I got my first digital camera. In 2003, we visited Europe for the first time in 10 years, kicking off nearly 20 years of trips there, often multiple times per year, first with a variety of digital cameras and then, of course, with smartphones. Then I switched from standalone cameras to smartphones for good, thanks to the Nokia Lumia 1030 in July 2013.

There are obviously up years and down years from a photo-taking perspective, but the dip in 2020 stands out. That, too, makes sense: That was the pandemic year, and aside from a belated drive to North Carolina to bring Kelly to college, we didn't travel at all that year after February.

But with vaccinations arriving in early 2021, we made our first flight in 16 months that June, on the way to Mexico City for the first time. And because we bought an apartment there in 2022 and flew there several times before and after the purchase, 2022 was our peak year for photos: We somehow took over 14,000 photos and over 400 videos that year.

And that's just what I saved. Consolidating what used to be three photo collections (plus dozens of smartphone backups) into a single collection was an excellent opportunity to do something I've wanted to do for years, and delete most of the device photos and screenshots I've taken over the course of 25 years of re...

Gain unlimited access to Premium articles.

With technology shaping our everyday lives, how could we not dig deeper?

Thurrott Premium delivers an honest and thorough perspective about the technologies we use and rely on everyday. Discover deeper content as a Premium member.

Tagged with

Share post

Please check our Community Guidelines before commenting

Windows Intelligence In Your Inbox

Sign up for our new free newsletter to get three time-saving tips each Friday

"*" indicates required fields

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Thurrott © 2024 Thurrott LLC