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Do not have filmstrip in Photoshop camera raw
Nov 13, 2015 12:00:57   #
Jessie Loc: SW Texas
 
Bought scot Kelly's book on photoshop and he talks about working in camera raw and having a filmstrip on left. I have photoshop cc 2015 and cannot figure out how to find the filmstrip. Thanks in advance for help in solving this problem.

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Nov 13, 2015 14:07:30   #
russelray Loc: La Mesa CA
 
Jessie wrote:
Bought scot Kelly's book on photoshop and he talks about working in camera raw and having a filmstrip on left. I have photoshop cc 2015 and cannot figure out how to find the filmstrip. Thanks in advance for help in solving this problem.

I believe it will only be there if you open two or more files. That way, you can do CTRL + A, which will highlight all the files in your film strip, and you can apply modifications to all the files at the same time. It's pretty nice.

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Nov 14, 2015 08:21:37   #
Picdude Loc: Ohio
 
russelray wrote:
I believe it will only be there if you open two or more files. That way, you can do CTRL + A, which will highlight all the files in your film strip, and you can apply modifications to all the files at the same time. It's pretty nice.


Yeah, that's the only time I've seen the 'filmstrip'. Really like the sync and apply to all functions when setting up for panorama scenes.

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Nov 14, 2015 08:37:01   #
kubota king Loc: NW , Pa.
 
if you open PS CC , and the film strip is not there , you can click on Windows tab , then click on Timeline . In side Bridge , click on Window tab , then Workspace , then click Filmstrip . In camera raw you will see 4 boxs in the bottem right of the photo showing , clicking on the first box on the left will show the before and after photo . Clicking on this box more then once will allow different views . Hope this helps , Tommy

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Nov 14, 2015 12:35:08   #
Jessie Loc: SW Texas
 
kubota king wrote:
if you open PS CC , and the film strip is not there , you can click on Windows tab , then click on Timeline . In side Bridge , click on Window tab , then Workspace , then click Filmstrip . In camera raw you will see 4 boxs in the bottem right of the photo showing , clicking on the first box on the left will show the before and after photo . Clicking on this box more then once will allow different views . Hope this helps , Tommy


I think I am confused over adobe camera raw and the filter in cc called camera raw filter. I am trying to work on the filter and can only get 1 picture at a time there. Am going from lightroom to photo, edit in, edit in adobe Photoshop cc 2015. The 2 pictures show up one in the big window and both above window as descriptions, not pictures. Am I doing everything wrong to this point, and if so, How do I do it correctly. Thanks for taking the time to straighten me out.

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Nov 14, 2015 16:27:04   #
russelray Loc: La Mesa CA
 
Jessie wrote:
I think I am confused over adobe camera raw and the filter in cc called camera raw filter.

They are the same. Adobe put Camera Raw in Photoshop as a Filter several versions ago so we wouldn't have to leave Photoshop in order to work in Camera Raw.

Jessie wrote:
I am trying to work on the filter and can only get 1 picture at a time there. Am going from lightroom to photo, edit in, edit in adobe Photoshop cc 2015. The 2 pictures show up one in the big window and both above window as descriptions, not pictures. Am I doing everything wrong to this point, and if so, How do I do it correctly. Thanks for taking the time to straighten me out.

If you're in Photoshop trying to use the Camera Raw Filter, I believe you can only work on one photo at a time in Photoshop. If you want to work on multiple photos, you need to be in Bridge or Camera Raw, not in a Photoshop Filter.

If you're working in Lightroom first, I believe it is going to export your pictures to Photoshop as JPGs, which means you'll bypass Adobe Camera Raw and never see the filmstrip as Kelby shows it.

You can set up your computer to open JPGs in Adobe Camera Raw at which point, if you opened two or more JPGs in Adobe Camera Raw, you would see the filmstrip.

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