Friday, July 29, 2011

Obtaining a "before" version of a raw edit in ACR

If you're like me, you probably like to display a before-and-after of your editing from time to time.  You've worked hard to craft a finished masterpiece from the original file that came from your camera, and you'd like to show people the results.

To do that, you need to go back and open a completely unedited version of your raw image.

The brutal way to do that is simply to clear your edits, and open the image at ACR's default settings.  Very effective.  BUT ... then you've lost your edits; and that's not a great idea - what if you need them again?

Fortunately the solution is really simple:

Open up your edited raw file.  In this example you can see I adjusted the white balance to a custom setting, lowered the exposure a bit, etc, etc:

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Photoshop's "Arrange" functions

In a discussion on Facebook recently, I was a little surprised to realise that not everyone is aware of the power of the "Arrange" options in Photoshop and Elements. Adobe allows us great control if we have multiple windows open at once.

The Arrange features have been available for as long as I can remember. They've always been accessible via the "Window" menu, as shown in this CS2 screenshot:


In the modern interface (CS4 and 5, and Elements 8 and 9) they're still in the Window menu, but also much more accessible right there at the top of the screen. It's a handy little button that you might not have noticed much before.

Here it is in Photoshop:



And here it is in Elements:

Comments or Questions?

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