Lately, I've been trying to get a reliable backup of my Google Photos so I can move to iCloud or just plain have a decent offline backup. I've used Google Takeout, but the resulting file structure is a mess. Not only does the archive size get artificially blown up, but there are some other problems with takeout.

I figured out that I can use a special technique to select all the photos from a single year and put them into an album. Once I've created the album, I can download the whole album via the UI, and it creates a single zip with all the photos. Best of all, the file creation dates are adjusted based on the metadata so no having to mess with exiftool to try to parse the JSON files.


How To Download Photos From Google Takeout


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I found an AWESOME app in the Mac Appstore. It is called Photo Sweeper. It can go through folders on your hard drive or even your Apple Photos library and de-dupe regardless of filenames/metadata differences. It basically looks at the photos based on a histogram or bitmap to compare similarity and is pretty darn accurate. You can dial up or dial-down the matching sensitivity. It has saved me literally HOURS of work. It ain't free at $9.99, but it has saved me WEEKS of mind-numbing error-prone work, so totally worth it. I find I need to run several passes with various settings to catch them all, but it beats doing it by hand.

I have over 1 TB of photos stored within Google Photos. I recently bought a Synology NAS so I'm trying to move photos into it. I'm especially interested in my cell phone photos as I have the ones taken with cameras already in the NAS.

As we all know, Google makes this as impossible as they can. I have a number of 50 GB zips that I need to download (they took a week to generate), but now I need to figure out what the next best step to rewrite the metadata to the photos is.

I just got thousands of photos out of Google takeout but I can't seem to import them elsewhere in the right chronological order. I've also found some tutorials using exiftool but I can't get the different timezones right? Any idea how to retrieve the time with the correct timezone? The timezone isn't in the JSON either.

However, those scripts have limitations with regards to timezones, and to some pictures with a name that differs slightly from the name of the JSON file, e.g. PHOTO_NAME(1).jpg being confused with PHOTO_NAME.jpg(1).json.QuickTime- and PNG-specific tags aren't updated either.

I originally felt PhotoStructure could benefit from facial recognition but after using multiple products for a while, I think facial recognition (and frankly, object recognition) may be best left for other products to do.

But when you download it, you will find yourself with hundreds of little folders with few photos and weird .json files inside.What if you want to just have one folder with all photos, in chronological order? Good luck copying all of that :confused:

Occasionally, Google Photos will not have stored any date/time information for some of your photos. If you'd like additional heuristics to be run on the filenames of those files, attempting to guess the date it was taken on, run it with the --guess-timestamp-from-filename flag.If you leave this off, or if no date can be guessed from the filename, those photos will be assigned the timestamp of when the script was run.

I really recommend you using Syncthing for syncing your photos and files across devices. It does so through your local WiFi, so you're not dependend on any service or internet connection. It will also keep original file creation date and metadata, so it resolves Android issue that I mentioned before.

Hey there. I downloaded about 40 GB of photos+data from Google Photos via Takeout. I have attempted to import these in the Apple Photos app, first one portion at a time (around 10 GB) and all together. I get no error messages and it does create a new file, but nothing is imported. I get no errors.

I have recently expanded my iCloud storage, and so my phone may be trying to upload photos as well (which does not seem to be showing up in Photos, nor should it, right? I'm unclear on that). I am just trying to migrate away from Google and get the decade of photos backed up on my MacBook Pro (13-inch, M1, 2020, Monterey 12.4). Perhaps I do not have enough memory? If so, what are my options?

Google Photos takeout exports the original images and a sidecar .json file that has the metadata (dates, locations, ) you might have updated inside Google Photos (i.e. about the same as Photos.app export originals with .xmp sidecar).

Using Google Takeout for exporting Google Photos images and videos is great for a large amount of data. Remember that you can also use Google Takeout to back up your photos manually, ensuring you always have them around just in case.

I deleted all my photos, videos, and albums from Google Photos, then I tried downloading my data with Google Takeout. The archive still includes Google Photos data. Does the data take a while to actually get deleted? I haven't had this issue with YouTube data (I deleted it and it is no longer present in archives I download with Google Takeout).

I'm curious how this actually works under the hood, as much as anyone knows and can talk about. I assume Google is secretive about how and where they store our data. That's part of the reason I deleted my photos: I want to be responsible for my own data (a massive undertaking and a story for another time and place).

Each picture and video exported from Takeout will be accompanied by a metadata.json file containing all the EXIF data. That data contains the information about how the picture was shot, the time and place, the people in the frame, the device used to take the picture, etc. Google 


Each picture and video from Takeout will be accompanied by a metadata.json file containing all the EXIF data. Some pictures will even be stripped of their own EXIF data, usually Location and Date values, making the import process to another platform messy. We will need to merge the JSON and image file back together if we want to correctly import those images elsewhere.

Many users choose to register a Google account to store calendar, Gmail, and Drive data in the cloud, especially photos. However, the storage space provided by the Google account is limited, and due to the needs of the user's work, sometimes the user needs to transfer the photos to other places.

Google Takeout is the hub for exporting and retrieving all data backed up to your Google account. Anything from Google Assistant notes and lists to Stadia game activity can be retrieved in Takeout. Hence, users opt for this tool to complete photo transfers. So, how to perform it? Detailed steps are provided below.

Of course, you can! After downloading your photos to your local devices, you can upload them to another Google account. The important point is that you need to unzip your downloaded folder before uploading.

The whole Google Takeout file transfer process may be interrupted due to poor network, so you need to keep an eye on the upload process. To store more photos, you'd better set the photo upload quality to "Storage saver" mode.

If you want to export all the images in Google Photos to iCloud Photos, there is an easy way to do it directly from your PC or Mac. If you're using a PC, you'll need to download the iCloud Windows app and set it up. Here's how to import Google Photos pictures and videos to iCloud:

Exporting Google Photos pictures and videos using Google Takeout is great for handling large amounts of data. Remember, you can also manually back up your photos using Google Takeout, making sure you always have them with you in case you need them. However, during the export process, users may encounter a "Google Takeout not working" issue.

Step 4. Transfer photos from Google Photos to another account using Cloud Transfer. Click on "Cloud Transfer", select Google Photos albums as the source, select a directory under another account as the destination, click "Transfer Now" and the process will begin.

Google Takeout is indeed a useful data transfer tool, especially for photo and cloud drive data transfer. With the above-detailed steps, you can easily complete Google Takeout transfer photos. If "Google Takeout transfer not working" appears, you can try the "Cloud Transfer" function provided by MultCloud.

To get items directly into your phone's photos app (whether the gallery in Android or Photos in iOS), download the Google Photos app to your phone. Then, open the photo you want to transfer in the app and select the More menu (three vertical dots). From there, choose Save to device.

To download Google Photos to a desktop computer, you can do the same thing as if you were moving them from a phone: Go to Google Photos and for individual images, choose Download from the menu. For an entire album, choose Download all.

Not sure what media of yours is in Google Album Archive or how to use Google Takeout? Have no fear -- we'll show you everything you need to know to keep from losing those old photos and videos. For more, here's what's new in Google Maps and how to check out the next version of Android.

Google Album Archive is a repository for photos and videos that you've shared on older Google services like Hangouts (now Google Chat) or Google Plus. It can also include media from Blogger and Picasa Web Albums, old profile pictures, YouTube channel art or automated backups.

To save your media from Google Album Archive before it's deleted, Google recommends using Google Takeout, the company's tool for exporting data. A customized Google Takeout link will take you directly to a page for downloading your Album Archive data.

I had only about 5MB of photos in my Album Archive, and I received a confirmation email from Google within 2 minutes that the process was complete. You can then use Google Takeout to download the ZIP or TGZ file directly, or manage your files on the storage service you selected. 006ab0faaa

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