Rather than my attempting to train you, pick up a copy of Bruce
Fraser's "Real World Camera Raw with Photoshop CS2". He details how
to work high volume batch processing with Photoshop CS2 and shows you
how to take advantage of Camera Raw's presets to minimize frame by
frame tweaking.
With Vuescan it's simple: set up a basic adjustment pattern, then use
Vuescan's ability to process PEF files. Fast and pretty simple. It's
not as interactive to set up, however.
Godfrey
On Jul 16, 2005, at 1:39 PM, Mishka wrote:
i have both, vuescan and cs2. could you give me the specifics of
how you do it?
I found that processing raw in cs2 requires tweaking brightness and
shadows for (almost) every frame.
best,
mishka
On 7/16/05, Godfrey DiGiorgi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hmm. I never presumed that moving to digital would be faster to get
my prints done, although it does turn out that way a good bit of the
time. I take forever to select and work my photographs ... ;-)
Compared to scanning film and post processing, it's much faster.
For a good solution to batch processing RAW, you should probably look
at Capture One. I use Photoshop CS2 + Camera Raw 3.1 for this, it
works well once you learn how to do it, but I also use Vuescan which
does very good batch processing as a background process.
Godfrey