Sorry, it is called "Sync", not "apply to all".
Igor > Date: Tue, 20 May 2014 13:06:31 -0400 (EDT) > From: Igor Roshchin > > > In LR, you don't need to do that on import. > 1. You can apply a filter to select the photos you want to batch-edit > (e.g. I apply a filter that has text "6400" (for ISO-6400)) > Go to the "develop" module. > 2. Edit one photo. > 3. Select the photos you want to apply it to (highlight, e.g. all by Ctrl-A) > 4. While keeping them all highlighted, choose the photo that you edited > to become "active". > 5. Then "Apply to all" in the "develop" module, and choose which parameters > you want to apply. > > Hope this helps, > > Igor > > > > > Tue May 20 11:23:12 EDT 2014 > Stanley Halpin > > I have inserted below a copy of Bryan's reply to your similar earlier > question about white balance. It is the same process you would follow for > noise reduction. > > Note that you can do a pre-set for the .standard. adjustments you want to > make to images when you import them. E.g., I use LR.s Scenic Sharpening (if I > recall the name correctly) as my preset when importing. But you could edit > and save that, with addition of your baseline noise processing. Make one that > is Scenic+6400noise, another that is Scenic+12800noise, etc. Then take care > of this basic batch adjustment on import. You have NOT lost anything, you > have just adjusted the start-point for whatever else you want to do to an > image. E.g., you may later want to turn OFF the noise reduction for a given > image; no problem. > > stan > > >> On May 2, 2014, at 12:31 PM, Bryan Jacoby <bryan.jacoby at gmail.com> > >> wrote: > >> > >>> In Lightroom, if you select a bunch of photos and turn on auto synch > >>> any change you make in one photo will be applied to others. So you > >>> have one photo with a white balance card in it, and then a bunch of > >>> other photos taken under the same lighting but without the white > >>> balance card (unless you find white balance cards to be aesthetically > >>> pleasing, in which case you can keep it in all of the photos). Click > >>> on the white balance card with the white balance eyedropper and it > >>> will correct the white balance in all of the selected images. It does > >>> not matter if the individual images were shot with AWB or the same > >>> fixed white balance setting, they will all end up with the same white > >>> balance after you do this. > >> > On May 20, 2014, at 9:31 AM, Eric Weir <eeweir at bellsouth.net> wrote: > > > > > I have a group of 142 images shot indoors under low light, 28 at 6400 ISO, > > 114 at 12800 ISO. I.ve never done any batching processing. I know that I.d > > at least like to apply noise reduction across these two groups of files. > > > > How do I do it? And should I assume the steps will be generalizable to > > other functions, e.g., exposure, white balance? > > > > Thanks, > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > Eric Weir > > Decatur, GA USA > > eeweir at bellsouth.net > > > -- PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List [email protected] http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above and follow the directions.

