CS2 vs CS in raw (Was Photoshop CS2)

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



CS2 has the advantage of bulk processing RAW files. You can open a folder, select all the raw images in it and open them at once in the raw converter. You then select images in the converter, set the settings and you can process them all and save them as PSD or JPG or TIFF. This is all done in the background while you work on other images in a new instance of Bridge. You can do this to  multiple folders at once. You do all the images and leave them to process while working on other stuff in Photoshop or just go out and come back in a while.
 
 
 
Herschel

"Emily L. Ferguson" <elf@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
At 9:03 AM -0500 9/18/06, lea murphy wrote:
> late, I've had some images with challenging exposures so what I did
>was turn auto settings back on to see what the suggested changes
>were for my images. What I discovered in doing that was that I
>rather enjoyed seeing the suggestions and then, as you say, use them
>as a point of departure and often I make changes to the suggestions
>but now I use them as a starting point.

That is, in effect, what CS 1 did anyway, it just didn't give you
option to unclick those boxes. However, Auto in CS 1 was different
from Camera Default and I don't yet know whether that will turn out
to be the case with CS 2 since my copy will probably show up sometime
this week.

Anybody know about that?
--
Emily L. Ferguson
mailto:elf@xxxxxxxx
508-563-6822
New England landscapes, wooden boats and races
http://www.vsu.cape.com/~elf/
http://e-and-s.instaproofs.com/




Herschel Mair
Head of the Department of Photography,
Higher College of Technology
Muscat
Sultanate of Oman
Adobe Certified instructor
 
+ (986) 99899 673
 
www.herschelmair.com


How low will we go? Check out Yahoo! Messenger?s low PC-to-Phone call rates.

[Index of Archives] [Share Photos] [Epson Inkjet] [Scanner List] [Gimp Users] [Gimp for Windows]

  Powered by Linux