Hi Kirk,
Thanks for getting back.
Because this is about recognising that I may have a sequence of photos that need identical metadata, I'd say that there are two solutions where a keyboard shortcut would work well in my workflow.
1. COPY ALL METADATA: It's almost certain that I won't want any difference between the images beyond filenames and timestamps. All IPTC metadata and keywords should be identical. Therefore, a single button and keyboard shortcut that copies all fields would work.
2. COPY IMAGE CONTENT FIELDS: When I ingest, I apply an IPTC metadata template. Therefore, post-ingestion, the only data that I modify are the fields in the Image Content section of the Metadata Info window. As a result, these are the only fields that I would be copying as part of this process.
In my workflow, both achieve the same thing. I understand that there may be reasons why the added flexibility in the second option would make it more usable for others
It might help if I give a real world example from last weekend...
I'm the team photographer for a professional ice hockey team. That means I probably keep more photos from a game than a press photographer because I'm also building an image archive for the club.
During last Saturday's game, there was a collision along the boards where one of our players ended up folding spectacularly into the boards. Shooting at 12 fps, I've got ten images in a sequence that I want to keep to show the entire scene in context. Given it is a ten image sequence covering a one second long scene, every single photo in that sequence is getting the same Description/Caption, Headline and Keywords because they all show the same thing, just at different points of its progression.
This request is to have a keyboard shortcut where, going through those 10 images post-ingestion, I can recognise that the image I'm currently viewing is essentially identical to the last one that I viewed and all of its image content data can therefore be copied from that previous image.
Graham.