Create and manage folders, Add an existing folder that contains images – Adobe Photoshop Lightroom CC User Manual
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Managing catalogs and files
Last updated 4/20/2015
2
Click the Photo Is Missing icon (
or
) in a thumbnail cell in the Grid view.
The Photo Is Missing icon also appears at the bottom of the Histogram panel. You can click it there, too.
A dialog box opens and displays the last known location of the missing photo.
3
Click the Locate button, navigate to where the photo is currently located, and then click Select.
4
(Optional) In the Locate dialog box, select Find Nearby Missing Photos to have Lightroom search for other missing
photos in the folder and reconnect them as well.
If an entire folder of photos is missing — the folder is dim in the Folders panel and has a question mark icon (
)
— you can relink all the photos at once by right-clicking (Windows) or Control-clicking (Mac OS) on the folder and
choosing Find Missing Folder from the context menu. See
Create and manage folders
The folders that contain your photos are displayed in the Folders panel of the Library module. The folders in the Folders
panel reflect the folder structure on the volume itself and appear in alphanumeric order. Click the disclosure triangle
to the right of a volume name to see the folders on that volume. Click the triangle to the left of a folder to see any
subfolders it contains.
You can add and move folders in the Folders panel, rename folders, and delete them. Changes you make to folders in
Lightroom are applied to the folders themselves on the volume.
Add an existing folder that contains images
Whenever you import photos, the folders in which they are located are added automatically to the Folders panel. You
can add folders and import the photos they contain using the Folders panel.
1
In the Folders panel of the Library module, click the Plus icon (+) and choose Add Folder.