RAW overload
Godfrey DiGiorgi
godders at mac.com
Mon Jul 2 09:09:45 EDT 2007
If you select half a dozen and go into the Develop module, you can
have all edits apply to the group in one of two ways:
- turn on AutoSync (on Mac OS X, hold down the Command key and click
the button at the bottom of the RH panel; on Windows, I believe you
use the Control key to do the same).
- make adjustments to one, then click Synchronize, pick which
parameters you want to synchronize and apply them.
You can also make all your edits to one, return to Grid view, then
copy and paste the edits to as many others (one at a time or in
groups) as you want.
Godfrey
On Jul 2, 2007, at 5:01 AM, David J Brooks wrote:
> Oky Doaky.
>
> I have to get my horse photos up on the site this morning, but i'll
> playaround in LR with the whistle off raw photos.
>
> I see most of them have the same look to them. If i select,say half a
> dozen can can i load those up in develop and the same adjustment are
> done to all 6, for instance.
>
> I will make time after lunch to play, but i'll need something for the
> paper late today.
>
> Dave
>
> On 7/1/07, Godfrey DiGiorgi <ramarren at mac.com> wrote:
>> Lightroom reads the RAW data and performs whatever edits you want on
>> it dynamically, so in essence everything you are seeing is a
>> processed RAW file if the files you imported are RAW files. It does
>> not render the image out to an RGB file format (PSD, JPEG, TIFF)
>> until you say "Export" or tell it to edit a file in Photoshop or
>> other image editor. This is a major advantage as it saves space on
>> the hard drive.
>>
>> You can export anywhere from one to as many photos that are in the
>> library at any time, so it is automatically batch converting whenever
>> you want it to.
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