Hi Kirk, yes, sorry, I know, what I actually meant is, where does the IPTC Date field gets its data from. What has happened is this: I have a folder with several hundreds of NEF files. At ingest the filenames were set using this string: GVC{year2}{month0}{day0}x{seqn}. The same string was used to add the filename to the Caption field, and the {year2}{month0}{day0} part was used to add the creation date in the Keywords field. This has been my ingest routine for over 10 years.
A few months ago (Oct 31) I had a job where I used two cameras. I ingested both cards into the same folder using the said naming string. Then, for easier editing, I sorted the images chronologically and then renamed the images to make the sort permanent. I do these things routinely; and (apparently) didn't check the result of the renaming. Yesterday, however, I discovered that all the names of the files in this folder now begin with GVC160908x, instead of GVC171031x, which would reflect the correct creation date.
I discovered that the renaming snapshot used the string GVC{iptcyear2}{iptcmonth0}{iptcday0}x{seqn}. However, when I tried what renaming would do on other folders, it always used the same date as the creation date. So I am very curious how a date from more than a year ago could creep into my renaming routine....
PS The two cameras are identical and their clocks and calendars are synchronized.
PPS There are a few other occurrences of the very same, incorrect date 160908 in filenames on my computer. I think they are X-files...