superkoax
12-15-2006, 12:37 PM
Well, this is retouching for me...I have done dodging and burning, removing wrinkles, ceaning the picture up real good basically...But when I come to the colouring and adding mood with color I want to keep the same feel and modd in every shot that I'm working on...So instead of doing the same stuff over and over again on the same - is there a way to make a save dfile of what I have done with the first picture and apply the same settings on another picture?
Gerry
Kraellin
12-15-2006, 12:55 PM
in photoshop, i believe it's called actions. in Paint Shop Pro it's called scripts.
i cant speak on the how-to in photoshop, but in Paint Shop Pro you can simply turn on a sort of 'record button' and it will log everything you do to one image until you turn the record off again. you can then save that as a new script and run it on another image and it will do exactly the same things you did in the original.
this is quite handy for some things, but can also be disastorous on others, as no two images are ever quite the same. but, you can also undo the whole thing, so no real disaster.
you can also write your own scripts, if you know how, and put in anything you want, within the programming capabilities of the scripting language and the overall program itself.
Swampy
12-15-2006, 12:55 PM
If you are using Photoshop CS2 and shot your pics in RAW format, you can do a lot of your basic tonal adjustments in Bridge/Camera Raw. Select multiples of photos in Bridge that have similar lighting for example and open them in Camera Raw. Fix one and apply the adjustment to the others.
I see that the next release of Photoshop (CS3) will let you open JPEG and TIF in Camera Raw.
superkoax
12-15-2006, 06:19 PM
thanks for the nice and informative answers...yes, I have seen actions in Photoshop...But haven't really undertood the whole consept with it...I will try this out...
thanks again
Have a nice weekend and merry christmas!
Gerry