3.4

Table Of Contents
Chapter 4 Working with Photos in the Browser 100
Identifying Referenced Images
After you import referenced images, you can identify them in the Browser by turning on
referenced image badge overlays. Referenced images appear with badges that show whether
their originals are currently available (online) or not found (oine).
These badge overlays
indicate the photos are
referenced images.
This badge overlay
indicates the photo is an
offline referenced image.
To turn on referenced image badge overlays
1 Choose Aperture > Preferences, or press Command-Comma (,).
2 In the Preferences window, click Appearance, then select the “Badge referenced items” checkbox.
You can select and work with online referenced images using the same procedures you use with
photos whose originals reside in the Aperture library.
Aperture keeps track of referenced images originals when you move or rename the les in the
Finder, keeping them on the same hard disk or volume. A referenced image appears as an oine
image if the hard disk holding the referenced images original has been disconnected from your
computer system. A referenced image is listed as “not found” when its original has been deleted,
moved to the Finder Trash, or moved from its original hard disk location to another hard disk and
Aperture can’t nd it.
Displaying a List of Referenced Images
When working with numerous photos in the Browser, you may need to determine which photos
have originals that reside in the Aperture library and which are referenced images whose
originals are located elsewhere on your hard disks.
You can select a group of photos in the Browser and Aperture can show a list of the referenced
images within the selection, including information about where the originals are located.
To see a list of referenced images in a selection
1 In the Browser, select a group of photos.
2 Choose File > Locate Referenced Files.