Surely, in order to "mark" them, PS has to have been told the orientation
to start with. As Pentax doesn't provide this information, PS has nothing
to work with. Or is it clever enough to work it out for itself?
John
On Fri, 05 Aug 2005 14:54:51 +0100, E.R.N. Reed <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
David wrote:
Here's my problem:
For my business (read hobby) I process 1500-2000 jpgs from one day into
web galleries and most of the images need to be rotated. Before I
switched to CS2 I used Photoshop's file browser to "rotate" the images
so when the galleries were made the images are rotate but the originals
remain unchanged. But when I switched to CS2 adobe bridge runs at a
snails pace making my former work flow unbearably slow.
Does anyone know of a different image browser that works like adobe's
that just marks images to be rotated rather than rotating them and
resaving them? The only solutions I've come up with is creating 2
copies of the same images, rotating one set, making the gallery, then
deleting the rotated images (this runs just as slow if not slower than
waiting for Bridge).
Thanks in advance,
David
Photoshop Elements 3 also has a file browser that marks the images to be
rotated and doesn't resave them unless you specifically command it to do
that (you didn't indicate if you were willing to spend money to get
this.) I would assume it "works like" the version you're used to, since
Photoshop and Elements come from the same place and often work alike.
Maybe a stupid question, but did you have to uninstall your older
version of Photoshop -- with the file browser you like -- or do you
still have it, and if you still have it, couldn't you use it for this
purpose?
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