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photoshop cc
Jan 4, 2016 12:13:00   #
E
 
have several jpg's open in photoshop. i would like to open them all in camera raw at the same time. i know about going to camera raw filter option. just dont know how to open several at once or if its possible... thank you

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Jan 4, 2016 12:23:59   #
big-guy Loc: Peterborough Ontario Canada
 
Just a question and not a slam... If you want to edit in a RAW editor why didn't you shoot RAW? What you are attempting is similar to driving a VW Beetle on the Indy 500 race track. Doable but so much missing.

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Jan 4, 2016 12:26:59   #
TheDman Loc: USA
 
You open them in Bridge, select all the ones you want to edit, right-click on one and choose "Open in Camera Raw".

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Jan 4, 2016 12:30:13   #
E
 
i understand your question. i already printed these and didnt like the way they came out. so i opened them as jpegs to fix the temp. i am so used to doing it in raw-something i didnt realize until i opened them as jpegs. so once they were open i figured y close the jpegs and reopen the originals....
thank you:)

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Jan 4, 2016 12:30:23   #
E
 
thank you

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Jan 4, 2016 12:35:12   #
Rongnongno Loc: FL
 
PS CC and ACR settings

Follow the instructions and ACR will open any JPG you throw at it.

ACR is different from the ACR filter. (The 'save' option is removed by example)

To open several images at the same time...

Open PS CC first. (You do not really to that if PS CC is the default editor, it is not on my PC so...)
Using explorer, select your files (Ctrl-click) drag the selections onto PS CC windows.
ACR will open all your files. (left side will show you what you are working on)
If you want to sync all the changes, Select the images you want to sync from the left strip. Right click, select from the menu than select what you want to sync.
To save these changes just keep the selection and select 'save'. To open in PS CC select open.

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Jan 4, 2016 12:43:39   #
John_F Loc: Minneapolis, MN
 
When PS opens a jpeg a decompresion algorithm is run. If the original jpeg compression was loseless and the decompression was loseless, then the opened image should at least be close to the original image data. Unfortunately not all cameras use identical compression algorithms. It is also useful to know that some cameras employ a compression of the sensor binary data in making it's raw file. Sony does that according to an article I saw months ago. Adobe's DNG is a standard so that all Adobe products can be synch regarding file handling. When Adobe makes a jpeg file they use their algorithm. I have always thought that TIFFs were uncompressed. That not correct.

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Jan 5, 2016 06:33:00   #
georgevedwards Loc: Essex, Maryland.
 
I am sure every photographer has a bunch of Jpegs in the library wishing they were raw. I have often thought the options on the Raw processor give a finesse not possible with normal photoshop. For instance I also have a lot of tiffs in my digital library I would like to use the Raw processor on to make improvements not quite possible in normal pp.
big-guy wrote:
Just a question and not a slam... If you want to edit in a RAW editor why didn't you shoot RAW? What you are attempting is similar to driving a VW Beetle on the Indy 500 race track. Doable but so much missing.

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Jan 5, 2016 10:32:08   #
Mark7829 Loc: Calfornia
 
Rongnongno wrote:
PS CC and ACR settings

Follow the instructions and ACR will open any JPG you throw at it.

ACR is different from the ACR filter. (The 'save' option is removed by example)

To open several images at the same time...

Open PS CC first. (You do not really to that if PS CC is the default editor, it is not on my PC so...)
Using explorer, select your files (Ctrl-click) drag the selections onto PS CC windows.
ACR will open all your files. (left side will show you what you are working on)
If you want to sync all the changes, Select the images you want to sync from the left strip. Right click, select from the menu than select what you want to sync.
To save these changes just keep the selection and select 'save'. To open in PS CC select open.
url=http://www.uglyhedgehog.com/t-359039-2.html#6... (show quote)


Nooooooo -
1. Just open PS Bridge,
2. Find the folder with the jpegs and Open
3. Hold down the CTRL key and individually click on the images you wish to open.
4. Right-click on any image a drop down menu will appear and select Open in Camera Raw. All of them will open like a list on the left hand side of the screen.

In ACR you can make corrections to one image and sync those changes to all of the images with just just two clicks

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Jan 5, 2016 13:08:41   #
Rongnongno Loc: FL
 
Mark7829 wrote:
.../...

After this post you have lost all credibility so type whatever, it will be lost.


(Download)

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Jan 5, 2016 13:19:01   #
TheDman Loc: USA
 
Rongnongno wrote:
After this post you have lost all credibility so type whatever, it will be lost.


Wow. LOL!

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Jan 5, 2016 13:30:41   #
jackm1943 Loc: Omaha, Nebraska
 
big-guy wrote:
Just a question and not a slam... If you want to edit in a RAW editor why didn't you shoot RAW? What you are attempting is similar to driving a VW Beetle on the Indy 500 race track. Doable but so much missing.

There are some editing functions that ACR can do with any file, jpeg, TIFF, etc., that are easier than with CC. I routinely use the ACR filter in CC on both RAW and jpeg files.

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Jan 6, 2016 02:04:06   #
JD750 Loc: SoCal
 
big-guy wrote:
Just a question and not a slam... If you want to edit in a RAW editor why didn't you shoot RAW? What you are attempting is similar to driving a VW Beetle on the Indy 500 race track. Doable but so much missing.


Here it is again. The UHH "raw snob" crowd looking down their noses at the JPEG shooter.

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Jan 6, 2016 10:12:19   #
PixelStan77 Loc: Vermont/Chicago
 
They do it every time.
JD750 wrote:
Here it is again. The UHH "raw snob" crowd looking down their noses at the JPEG shooter.

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Jan 6, 2016 10:36:17   #
blackest Loc: Ireland
 
JD750 wrote:
Here it is again. The UHH "raw snob" crowd looking down their noses at the JPEG shooter.


No not at all, that raw is better for post processing due its dynamic range is true. However that has nothing to do with the person at all.


It's not as if 4 days a week a raw file is better and on the other 3 jpeg is better. It is what it is.

There is good reason for using jpeg and for raw. Choose what you want.

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