My first project in 2024 is to make available my photos online for anyone to download. Mainly for family and friends, but also it will work as a way to easily find/show them when I'm away from home, and to have everything under one easy-to-remember web adress.
I've been trying to find the perfect solution to this for years, and if not perfect, I've come up with a good plan. In short, I have a basic google account that costs me almost nothing, and gives me, among other things, 200GB of cloud storage, and a very basic online blog creation tool and a simple blog adress.
I'll not be blogging about what's for dinner. It's for sharing the links to my audio archive from many years of recording my band and other artists, my family/friends videos, my Youtube channel, and photos archive. The first three have been in place for some time, but it's taken some time to figure out the arrangement of my photos.
I have been a Lightroom user since it came out, and I have everything there. Including scans of my slides, prints, old family albums back to before WW2, and of course the digital era. I've created a LR collection called "PHOTO library" and sub-collections and sub-sub… you get the idea. These LR collections contain just references to the images. So I spend alot of time organizing these collections for the web site, as that's their single purpose. My original photos folder hierarchy is untouched.
I have a folder on the mac called "PHOTO library" and when I'm happy with a collection in Lightroom, I export its content to a sub-folder there, as full-sized jpgs. To update the "PHOTO library" on Google Drive, which my blog links to, I use my backup app which is Carbon Copy Cloner, to sync the two folders; the one on my mac and the one on Google Drive. (Just like iCloud, Google Drive Desktop uses a folder in ~/Library/Cloudstorage to keep copies of everything I upload, but I'm OK with that, I'll just right-click on it and select "Discard downloads" when I'm finished with the uploading.)
I haven't done the math, but maybe 15.000 jpgs of about 2-4MB each - around 40-50GB? And I'm hoping easily manageablefile sizes will make people download stuff and help with longevity.