![]() ![]() To set up workflow option presets, click the blue linked workflow text at the bottom of the Camera Raw window, customize the options in the Workflow Options dialog box that opens, and at the top of the dialog box use the commands in the Preset menu to create or update workflow presets. To choose a workflow preset in the main Camera Raw window, right-click the blue linked workflow text at the bottom of the window. Now Camera Raw has a similar capability in the form of workflow presets. Lightroom users have had it much easier, because if you saved a Lightroom export preset you could reproduce the settings of a previous export instantly and exactly. If you wanted to output more images using the settings from an export before the most recent one, you would have to enter those settings all over again. Up until now it has been a bit of a hassle to use Camera Raw for direct output to different media because it could remember only the last settings you used. Note that this icon does not necessarily mean a CMYK profile is selected, because it will appear if the printer profile you’ve selected is RGB-based. This is consistent with the new soft-proofing capability. In the example below, the second zone from the left is dragged and the readout shows that zone affects the Shadows value.īy the way, if you’re new to Camera Raw 8, notice that when you select a printer profile in Workflow Options the usual highlight and shadow clipping icons at the top left and top right corners of the histogram are replaced by a single Gamut Warning icon in the top right corner (the one that looks like a printer). ![]() When you drag in the histogram, the corresponding slider moves and a readout below the histogram tells you what’s being changed. For example, dragging the far left side of the histogram (the darkest tones) adjusts the Blacks slider. You can drag ranges of the Camera Raw histogram left or right, and each range corresponds to a slider in the Basic panel. The features below add to those in the June release of Camera Raw 8.1 and were already part of Lightroom, such as soft-proofing and making the crop aspect ratio independent of output dimensions. This time it looks like Adobe wanted to sync up the feature sets more tightly. ACR catches up to LightroomĪdobe keeps ACR and LR in sync for format compatibility, but Lightroom has historically had more efficiency and workflow features than Camera Raw. (Version 5.2 of Lightroom was released at the same time.) Both have been available as public release candidates (test versions), but these are now the final versions. ![]() Adobe Photoshop Lightroom has traditionally had a few more productivity features than Adobe Camera Raw, but the improvements in the September 2013 release of Adobe Camera Raw 8.2 bring Camera Raw closer to parity with Lightroom. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |