Let’s wrap up my post from last week on using face recognition in Lightroom. If you should ever find a photo of a person within a face group who is not the right person for that face group (or if it is a photo you don’t want assigned that person’s name), you can right-click the photo and choose Remove photo from Person in the contextual menu that appears.
If you have a lot of face groups that you want to hide at once, click the three-dot menu in the upper-right while in People View, and choose Show and Hide People. That same three-dot menu also contains options for sorting the face groups by first name, last name, or count (how many photos within that group from highest to lowest).
The goal of all of this is to help you find photos of those people over time. Exit People View by clicking All Photographs, then enter a person’s name in the search field. One of the data points that will appear is any people tag that matches what you’ve entered. You can use People Tags alone to find all photos of that person or combine those tags with other keywords for more specific searches. The real power of entering any kind of metadata is how it can help you find, organize, and access your photos over your lifetime.
People View on Mobile
I find it much easier to do all of what I described above in the desktop version of Lightroom, but you can do all of this on mobile too. I just find the larger desktop screen and interface easier to use for a big job like this. The benefit though is that no matter where you assign the names or set cover photo or hide faces it all syncs across the Lightroom ecosystem (but not Lightroom Classic). So start with Lightroom on your Mac or Windows computer if you prefer and know you can leverage that work to find your people on all of your other devices that run Lightroom.