I used to keep every image I shot, good or bad. I used to shoot Jpeg only, but now that I shoot RAW+Jpeg usually, my hard drives are filling up fast. I use two 1TB external drives with identical files on each -- in case one crashes, I have the other.
I can easily shoot 1200 images in an evening. So that's 1200 RAWs and 1200 jpegs, plus my Photoshop work files and the final optimized jpegs. It's long been my policy to keep everything, good or bad, so that I can always go back and get any image from the shoot, and I can see how I did in a shoot by how many keepers versus outtakes I have.
Maybe it doesn't make sense to do it that way anymore. I rarely go back and look at the original Jpegs or RAWs. Once I've done my processing, I usually only use the Photoshop work files or the web-optimized jpegs. If my place burned down and my twin external hard drives perished, all my images would be gone. The size of my archives is too great to practically backup to an online backup services like Carbonite. I suppose I could keep the finished files in a separate place on the hard drive and then only back that up to Carbonite, but still keep all the shoot files on my drives. Then if there were a fire, I would keep the all important final results, but lose the original shots.
I do compress all my original shoot files into RAR files via WinRAR to minimize the space they take, but they're still taking up lots of room. Of course I could archive them to DVD and remove them from the hard drives, but that sounds like a headache of a project.
I'm curious if others have mulled this issue over and and how you've dealt with mass storage issues.




