Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Bug reporting?

Is there still a setup for reporting bugs?



Version 1 seems to be a really memory hog - and it won't import more than 500 images without crashing. I can get it to import 500 at a time, but if I point it to more than that it freezes and then closes without ever getting to the preview/renaming dialog. I can do 500 at a time, but it's a bit of a pain - any ideas anyone?
Bug reporting?
I've imported 28,000 in one go.. Give more system details
Bug reporting?
MacBook Pro 2.0ghz, 2gb RAM, nothing else open. Seemed a bit odd to me too!

The files are on an HFS-formatted USB external - but that shouldn't make any difference, should it?
  • olay regenerist
  • nikon camera settings for an adobe only...

    If I use a Nikon D70, shoot raw, don't use Nikon nx, and want to import into Lightroom as dng--are there certain in-camera setting to use or avoid? Use to think only decision was whether to import as dng or nef. But if Nikon's in camera settings aren't accessible without nx, do you have to rethink all your camera settings just because you want to import into Lightroom as dng?

    Thank you,

    Tim
    nikon camera settings for an adobe only...
    Lightroom (and Adobe Camera Raw) ignore in-camera settings other that white balance.



    I have used ACR and Lightroom with D70 and D200 NEF files and am quite pleased with the results.
    nikon camera settings for an adobe only...
    I agree with Bobs comments above, using a D200 now with some old D70 files I generally convert to DNG upon import to LR and save the NEFs off line.

    I like the results after developing and have no issues, especially after having processed and printed miliions of negatives from film !!

    I don't care too much about the camera settings apart from correct exposure, lowest possible ISO and reasonable white balance, but usually have that set on auto.

    ''But if Nikon's in camera settings aren't accessible without nx, do you have to rethink all your camera settings just because you want to import into Lightroom as dng? ''



    The only settings on the camera you really have to ''worry about'' are F stop, shutter spped and ISO...those are the only settings that will effect a raw file from the standpoint of Camera Raw/Lightroom.

    Bob, Geoff, and Jeff,

    Only reason I selected custom ''image enhancements'' was to choose color mode II-Adobe RGB instead of the default sRGB. Those images do come into Lightroom as RGB, but so far I've copied images off the memory card without converting to dng. I'm now thinking of copying all images from the card in their native nef format just for an extra copy, and then importing into Lightroom as dng and backing them up again during this import. I'll test to see if images imported as dng come in as sRGB or RGB. But maybe that's more of an export issue rather than a capture issue when shooting raw.

    Thanks for your advise,

    Tim

    '' I'll test to see if images imported as dng come in as sRGB or RGB.''



    Raw files come in as raw with _ON_ color space attached...since it's raw. That's why I said the only things that effect raw files is F stop, shutter speed and ISO. Nothing else you set on cameras as any direct impact on a file. It's only a metadata tag and since Nikon (and Canon) refuse to document their raw file formats or use a standardized raw file format, that ain't gonna change any time soon.



    Raw is raw..ya know?

    %26gt;The only settings on the camera you really have to ''worry about'' are F stop, shutter spped and ISO...those are the only settings that will effect a raw file from the standpoint of Camera Raw/Lightroom.



    Well, they will affect the exposure, but Camera Raw/Lightroom does not care about the actual settings, unless it uses the ISO for sharpening/NR stuff - does it?



    OTOH, WB and NEF compression will be used. Settings such as sharpening and contrast will not matter, unless you are shooting raw+jpg - then you will see the effect on the jpg.



    One thing to consider, is that the WB and contrast settings have a small influence on the in-camera exposure calculation unless you are shooting in manual mode.

    Setting WB in-camera will have an effect on a RAW imported into LR because LR will use that WB setting as the default for that image. This doesn't affect the image itself, of course, but it will affect what you see in LR before you start making changes.

    ''but Camera Raw/Lightroom does not care about the actual settings, unless it uses the ISO for sharpening/NR stuff - does it? ''



    Yes...

    %26gt;''but Camera Raw/Lightroom does not care about the actual settings, unless it uses the ISO for sharpening/NR stuff - does it? ''



    %26gt;Yes...



    Thanks for the info Jeff. Good to know, especially in the next release???

    I also just convert my NEF's to DNG on import. I tried some of the presets for import, but quickly realized that all of the photos on a memory card rarely need the same things. I would also argue that most people don't choose all the optimal settings in camera (hence the advantages of RAW).



    For this reason, I find my best workflow is to simply edit groups of pictures that are similar. So if I take a few pictures inside at a birthday party, I will spend a few minutes in the develop module changing my settings, and then I will simply sync, auto sync, or copy and paste all of my develop settings to the 10 other photos that have the same issues.



    One note on sharpening. It supposedly is set to a decent setting by default. Check out this article:

    http://www.oreillynet.com/digitalmedia/blog/2007/04/whats_with_the_number_25.htm l



    --

    Doug

    ''I tried some of the presets for import, but quickly realized that all of the photos on a memory card rarely need the same things.''



    True for most scene or image specific settings, not true at all for calibrate settings. I routinely import images from cards and apply my own set of default settings which include my camera's calibration settings as well as lowered sharpening settings.



    Depending on the shooting situation, I'll also often import with Auto-Tone correction on. Course, I don't do that for shots that are bracketed...

    Jeff, do you use Nikon??

    If so would you be prepared to share a preset as a starting point?

    ''Jeff, do you use Nikon?? ''



    LOL. . .no, Canon pays me to use Canon :~)



    (I'm a Canon Explorer of Light)



    Sorry, and even if I did, the whole point of the Camera Raw/Lightroom calibrate function is to allow for camera by camera calibration...there's enough variation camera by camera that would make my camera different than yours...

    Thanks anyway.......

    There are a couple of Nikon colour presets on Inside Lightroom if you are interested in colour looks.



    Richard Earney



    --

    http://inside-lightroom.com

    I would assume these are coming down the pike, but I've gotten two of the recently released Lightroom books, and they are, naturally, very basic and all encompassing. There are several smaller areas that I would love to find material on, like this camera calibration option. I imagine writers are hard at work, but books on specific and detailed aspects of Lightroom would sure be welcome.

    Howard

    Rick Walker of Nikonians posted some camera calibration presets for the D80 that are something like this:



    Red Hue: -25

    Red Saturation: +45

    Green Hue: 0

    Green Saturation: +10

    Blue Hue: +10

    Blue Saturation: -25



    They work well for me when applied to a NEF or a jpg shot in Adobe RGB mode.



    jeff

    Thanks Doug, Richard, and Jeff for the sharpening article, color preset tutorial, and camera calibration example. Before I committed to a raw workflow, I spent time testing Nikon's different settings for jpegs. And now it's time to learn Lightroom's settings for a raw workflow. And since it's an Adobe product, I won't have wasted all the time learning Photoshop since 1994.

    Tim

    Jeff,



    Any idea what default setting in LR will match Nikon Capture for D200 files? Also, do you start from ''import'' or ''zeroed''?



    Thanks,

    Foster

    Foster,



    Sorry, I haven't researched settings for the D200, although I sure wouldn't mind having a D200. ;)



    If you haven't done so already, search this forum.



    http://www.nikonians.org/cgi-bin/dcforum/dcboard.cgi?az=list%26amp;forum=DCForumID202%26amp; conf=DCConfID3



    jeff

    save changes

    Have Mac G4 laptop. Using Lightroom for first time. I have cropped. How do I save the crop? I seem to be trying to use this as I have used Photoshop and perhaps that is my problem. Thank you, Marianne
    save changes
    That is so right Marianne, no need to save anything as all your action such as cropping are undoable. The file is ''untouched'' and all that LR has is instructions on what to do with the file.

    With a crop, try going to a file you have cropped and in the develop module select the crop tool and you will see your earlier crop show up. You can then alter it or not as you choose.

    Hope that helps....



    Enjoy LR!!!
    save changes
    M-



    Your crop is already saved! Hit R again, and it'll be revealed. You can change it, or save it as a snapshot, and redo it. When you Export - to a TIFF, PSD or JPEG, the crop will be ''permanent'' for that exported file....

    In addition to John, if you edit or export a PSD the crop will show up and be adjustable in ACR or PSCS3.

    M-



    Whenever you decide to take a master image and edit it for some purpose, you might consider first making a virtual image and then edit that. Your master will still be available to derive other variations in the future, and the virtual copy will be the first edited version. Of course you can create more virtual copies from the master image. Any time you need to use one of these copies in the real world (for print or email, for example) you export.



    Of course if you forget to first make a virtual copy and change the original, you can make a virtual copy of that edited version and undo all the editing - voila, a new copy of the original.



    - Pierre

    Pierre,



    It is even better than that:



    With the image selected, You can go to the Develop Module, and click on the bottom of the history to see what the image was like on import. While it is showing the import state, switch back to Library Module, and still see the image as it was on import. And if you wish, make a virtual copy of it, as it was on import without having undone the previous editing.



    I thought that was pretty cool.

    Narsil: I was wondering how to do that. A few times I've tweaked a file only to decide that I should make a virtual copy, first. I've been using the history as an undo list, but didn't really think of it as a /redo/ until now.



    Sometimes the most obvious things are right there in front of you.

    Great tip, Narsil!



    Aperture has two ways to make a version (their ''virtual copies'') - 1) make version from the given image (it may be edited) and 2) make version from the master. That's one thing I'd like to see in LR.



    - Pierre

    Cropping in Photoshop / Viewing in...

    I created a special crop in Photoshop then saved as a PSD. When I view it in Lightroom it distorts to the window shape.



    It also distorts when creating a Web Gallery.



    What to do?
    Cropping in Photoshop / Viewing in...
    Please explain a bit more and include system and versions, thanks..
    Cropping in Photoshop / Viewing in...
    Sure. My apology for the oversight.



    Here's the info about my setup:



    G5 Quad 4GB RAM

    Mac OS 10.4.9

    CS3

    Ordered Lightroom but currently using most recent Demo.

    OK, thanks. How are the crops distorting, can you email me an original and a distorted crop?

    service@villageimage.co.nz



    I use a similar system, so lets see if we can replicate it..

    Will do Geoff. Have to wrap up some deadlines and will then put the files togther to send to you. Thanks!



    Linda

    Ok, thanks.

    Geoff,



    I just sent an email your way with a link for downloading these files. They are large and still uploading so you might need to wait about 20 minutes.



    I just got my copy of Lightroom. Should I remove the demo before attempting to install it? Any other special instructions since I've been working in the demo?

    Don't bother uninstalling it, just register your installed copy using the serial number you received with your purchased copy. The only difference between the trial and purchased versions is the serial number, which turns off the 30 day trial restriction.

    Thank you!

    OT Question: Does Split Toning really work? It seems to be incomplete at best, and broken otherwise.

    ''Does Split Toning really work? ''



    Absolutely...it works great for color and B%26amp;W images...do you know how to use it?

    %26gt; Absolutely...it works great for color and B%26amp;W images...do you know how to use it?



    Obviously not. My bad.



    Thanks!

    Many many humble apologies. Split Toning does work wonderfully!!

    Peace offering
    %26lt;br /%26gt;
    %26lt;br /%26gt;
    %26lt;a href=''http://www.pixentral.com/show.php?picture=1nEa4dBDvwjFhWzD5bpMpMaStaJhF'' /%26gt;%26lt;/a%26gt;
    %26lt;img alt=''Picture hosted by Pixentral'' src=''http://www.pixentral.com/hosted/1nEa4dBDvwjFhWzD5bpMpMaStaJhF_thumb.jpg'' border=''0'' /%26gt;

    Very cool, have your files now and will action them as soon as LR has finished an export of 630 images which takes hours !!

    Still time for other things!!

    Thanks very much Geoff!

    Edited:



    Correction. I found the answer to the question I just asked... in the Preferences.

    Sounds like you are cooking with gas now !!!!

    I'm moving right along. :-)

    They look ok to me at this end, can you explain your special crop please.

    I did pretty much what you had with lens distortion but in LR looked fine

    Geoff,



    Thank you for testing this.



    I'll put together screen shots for you to see. I'll also try trashing my preferences to see if that helps.



    Linda

    Geoff,
    %26lt;br /%26gt;
    %26lt;br /%26gt;If I view it in Library Mode it looks normal. If I view it in Develop Mode it is distorted. If I view it in Web Mode it is distorted. If I create a Web Gallery it is distorted in the gallery.
    %26lt;br /%26gt;
    %26lt;br /%26gt;b Here's a screen shot in Develop Mode:
    %26lt;br /%26gt;
    %26lt;br /%26gt;
    %26lt;a href=''http://www.pixentral.com/show.php?picture=1bTpUS7KVRaTGVB3AJWJYOgxMbrO01'' /%26gt;%26lt;/a%26gt;
    %26lt;img alt=''Picture hosted by Pixentral'' src=''http://www.pixentral.com/hosted/1bTpUS7KVRaTGVB3AJWJYOgxMbrO01_thumb.jpg'' border=''0'' /%26gt;
    %26lt;br /%26gt;
    %26lt;br /%26gt;b Here's a screen shot in Library Mode:
    %26lt;br /%26gt;
    %26lt;br /%26gt;
    %26lt;a href=''http://www.pixentral.com/show.php?picture=1OlwZqKlDPAhN82I8HkEOLHEzqRyfx'' /%26gt;%26lt;/a%26gt;
    %26lt;img alt=''Picture hosted by Pixentral'' src=''http://www.pixentral.com/hosted/1OlwZqKlDPAhN82I8HkEOLHEzqRyfx_thumb.jpg'' border=''0'' /%26gt;

    I trashed the Preferences but the problem still exists.

    I am having a hard time telling which images are rated and which ones are not in the normal Library Mode. I looked in the preferences but didn't see anything.



    What am I overlooking?

    My bad again. I found the way to make the ratings show in the Library View Options. Guess all it takes is to post and make myself look like the dummy I too often am... to find the answer. :-)

    Definitely something strange there, that is not how it looked to me, hmmmmmm will ponder this and let you know later!!!!

    Thank you Geoff!

    I hope this is the right thread. I confess that I have not been able to work out exactly what split toning does and how to achieve its effects. I cannot find anything much about it in the help sections. Can anyone please point me in the right direction.?

    %26gt;Roger May1 - 1:56am May 6, 07 PST (#27 of 27)



    %26gt;I hope this is the right thread. I confess that I have not been able to work out exactly what split toning does and how to achieve its effects. I cannot find anything much about it in the help sections. Can anyone please point me in the right direction.?



    Nope wrong hread. You would be better off the start a new one with a tite reflecting you question re: split toning, even thought the subject was brought up here, this thread is more about cropping and veiwing he crop as the title says.



    Don



    Don Ricklin, MacBook 1.83Ghz Duo 2 Core running 10.4.9 %26amp; Win XP, Pentax *ist D

    http://donricklin.blogspot.com/

    Does LR honor in-camera settings when...

    If I shoot RAW with my D200 and use in-camera sharpening, saturation,

    contrast, and so on, will LR honor those settings? I thought it did, but

    something I read (I forget where) led me to believe it doesn't.



    If it does, how do the changes I make in Develop relate to the in-camera

    settings? Are they above-and-beyond, or instead-of?



    --

    Rob Freundlich

    ''Males are biologically driven to hunt giraffes'' - Newt Gingrich

    ''Some folks you don't have to satirize - you just quote 'em'' - Tom Paxton
    Does LR honor in-camera settings when...
    No. Lightroom behaves just like ACR when it comes to the teatment of NEF files.
    Does LR honor in-camera settings when...
    The only application that does that is Nikon's godawful slow Nikon Capture (NX). Otherwise, you will have to make some calibration entries in LR to emulate that--and that is not exactly easy :)

    No. No RAW processing program should honor things like that. Only bitmap

    images can have things like that applied and then they aren't RAW. Take RAW

    in the literal sense in that it is the RAW unprocessed data from the cameras

    sensor. To apply contrast, sharpening, etc. to a RAW image would mean it was

    no longer RAW.



    If you want those things applied to your images then shoot JPG or TIF.



    Robert

    Oh, one last thing. Those settings aren't even included in the RAW file so

    even if a program like ACR or Lightroom wanted to use them they aren't

    there. Now the propritary software may automatically do things to a RAW

    image that it brings in, but most RAW programs can do that as well.

    Including ACR and LR.



    Robert

    %26gt;No. No RAW processing program should honor things like that. Only bitmap images can have things like that applied and then they aren't RAW.



    This is not correct. Every time you make an edit in Lr, the edit is stored as metadata - just like the sharpening setting set in-camera. The issue is whether Lr can take advantage of these in-camera settings. This is unlikely because camera makers do not document these settings in the raw files.

    %26gt;Oh, one last thing. Those settings aren't even included in the RAW file so even if a program like ACR or Lightroom wanted to use them they aren't there.



    Whoops, wrong again. The information is saved in the raw file - usually in the maker notes. As I mentioned above, the way it is stored, and what each setting means is not documented by camera makers.

    If I understand the Adobe philosophy of the handling of raw images correctly, the only camera setting Camera Raw reads is white balance. While it is true that these other settings might be recorded by the camera, they are not interpreted by Adobe Camera Raw. Camera Raw and Photoshop both treat the raw image as a read-only of raw data that must be processed completely within the Camera Raw plug-in and finished in Photoshop if necessary.



    Edit: sorry, I forgot which forum I was in. The same is true with Lightroom. Additionally, Lightroom treats JPEG and tiff images the same way.

    Yes Rory the camera manufaturers do not want 3rd party providers of raw conversion software to be able to process their raw files. So its up to Adobe, Bibble, Capture one etc to develop their own procedures and profiles. Its a matter of competition remember each camera manufacturer are also providers of conversion software and firmware for the in camera processing. No one wants to reveal what they consider their competive edge.

    %26gt;Yes Rory the camera manufaturers do not want 3rd party providers of raw conversion software to be able to process their raw files. So its up to Adobe, Bibble, Capture one etc to develop their own procedures and profiles. Its a matter of competition remember each camera manufacturer are also providers of conversion software and firmware for the in camera processing. No one wants to reveal what they consider their competive edge.



    I understand the why and I am an advocate of open raw. I did not think it was germane to the topic. But, now that you have got me going, I was not a happy camper when Nikon encrypted WB. We can thank Thomas Knoll for putting Nikon's feet to the fire. And before you bring it up, i know other manufacturers have and do obfuscate data in a variety of ways. I have taken a close look at the dcraw code.



    Cheers

    Rory

    I just made to point because on many forum I frequent the same issue crops up all the time. I use LR, SilkyPix, RSP, Bibble and tried a few others. Most new users want the default to match the camera makers jpg.

    %26gt;Most new users want the default to match the camera makers jpg.



    True.

    ''Most new users want the default to match the camera makers jpg. ''



    I would change that to ''Most new users _THINK_ they want the default to match the camera makers jpg.'' largely because they don't know any better...

    oops!

    I've nearly convinced myself to switch to DNG from now on.



    I shoot raw on a D80, and the default presets (which I understand /replace/ most settings present in the raw file) for the Nikon D80 look fine in Lightroom. As soon as I get a Macbeth colour chart I'm going to cook up my own preset (just because I can).



    I tried the Nikon NX software for 5 minutes, and it was truly horrible. I'm not overly impressed that Nikon has decided to encrypt all the details in their raw format, but at least Adobe convinced them to provide the key for the WB for ACR.



    As long as ACR can get at the white balance and the camera preset is reasonably accurate, I see no reason not to abandon storing my images as NEF and switch to DNG.

    John,



    I shoot Nikon D200 NEF, and I see no advantage to converting to DNG. I may not want to use Nikon software now (and don't think I will in the future) but definitely couldn't if I converted.



    I found converting to NEF didn't save space, and was another step in the process. I guess now you can inport in LR as a DNG.



    I know the argument for converting to DNG is that some day Nikon and Canon will just dog up and die and we'll all be stuck with our CRW and NEF files. I don't think Nikon and Canon is going to go away, and if they do, I'll just tell the computer to convert then and then go to to sleep.



    I suppose one advantage is not having xmp sidecare files, but I guess I really don't care about them unless the get flat tires and stop rolling with the image files.

    ''I know the argument for converting to DNG is that some day Nikon and Canon will just dog up and die and we'll all be stuck with our CRW and NEF files.''



    No, the argument is that for long term preservation and conservation of digital photes, what's more likely to be usable in 10, 25 or 50 years from now...a proprietary, undocumented file format from Nikon or Canon that even THEY have a hard time keeping working or a standarized and documented file format that is not propietary...check this article (that I wrote, so I may be biased) on PhotoshopNews.com called
    Digital Preservation it refers to an initiative by the Library of Congress called the
    National Digital Information Infrastructure and Preservation Program



    They have come to the conclusion that there are 7 factors that will effect the long term preservation and conservation of ''digital objects'' (which includes things like Word docs, audio and video files and things like digital photos). Read the factors and you'll see why NEFs and CR2s pretty much suck.



    Am I worried about accessing my image next year? Well, aside from drive failure (which is a REAL worry) not particularly...am I worried that my original (raw) images may not be accessible in 50 years? Yeah, I am. Consider what is at risk...



    I recently had to go deal with my Mom's house (after she passed away). The biggest problem and disappointment was dealing with family photos. Seems there are prints from the late 1890's (B%26amp;W) that look fine and dandy...seems the photos from the 60s %26amp; 70s are literally, almost gone. Why? Cause Kodak stuffed non-archival color print processing down our throats and we didn't know any better.



    I ain't falling for that same crap this time from the camera companies...



    Unless they come out with some sort of statement regarding their company's policy regarding raw file format support on into the future, I simply will not believe a word that say...there is just too much as risk that they'll blow it off some point down the road...



    So, you may not think that your original raw file format images are at risk...but I'm here to tell you that they are, given the current state of affairs. And nothing that Nikon or Canon have said has had any effect on my feelings...only Adobe is even addressing the issue. And that says something, right there.

    I prefer to archive the finished images, rather than the RAWs. Look at the RSP situation. If people haven't converted and lose the use of RSP (which they will eventually as new operating systems and computers come into use), they will have to re-create whatever they were thinking at the time in a new tool, even if they converted to DNG. The RSP migration tool isn't available yet, but when it does become available, the conversions in LR won't be perfect matches to those from RSP. Finally, any edits done at the pixel level aren't preserved in a RAW or DNG containing a RAW.



    JPEG is a documented format, and it's supported much more widely than DNG. I recommend anyone wishing to preserve images for a long time convert them to JPEG at full resolution and high quality. Preserving the RAW or DNG is secondary, which isn't to say you shouldn't do it. It is to say you shouldn't do it at the expense of preserving the finished image.

    OK Jeff point well taken.

    On Tue, 1 May 2007 12:52:09 -0700, John_Verne@adobeforums.com wrote:



    %26gt;I tried the Nikon NX software for 5 minutes, and it was truly horrible.



    Admittedly the UI isn't the easiest to relay to and speed could still

    be improved, but in my experience 5 minutes is - unfortunately! - not

    enough to appreciate Capture NX. It takes days and weeks, depending on

    the number of photos one uses it on. The moment one ''gets it'' NX is a

    wonderful tool.







    --

    Dierk (sometimes known as Evo2Me)

    [DH虏 Publishing]

    www.DH2Publishing.info

    Writing and Imaging

    Dierk:



    That was 5 internet minutes, as in ''worth 5 minutes of my time''. I tried to use Capture NX for the entire trial period. It is a terrible app that I refused to pay money for. It had a lot of unrealized potential, but was not worth any more of my time. I lasted a week or so.



    I am not excited about spending money on proprietary software and file formats that may not be supported into the future. This is a real problem that digital media faces going forward.



    At any rate, the /only/ thing that Capture NX gave me was the ability to do identical in-camera processing on imported exposed images. This is a neat idea that, in practice, didn't end up being all that significant. Especially when you have to fight with one of the ugliest, unusable apps I've ever seen a vendor ask real money for on the Mac.



    For me, this is about photography, and there are many existing tools that can let me (for example) take a section of sky in a photo and turn it magenta, or tweak the sharpening. All I find I care about anymore are the three exposure parameters and white balance. I like to get it right in the camera, and the ability to tweak that ''right'' on the desktop, while very powerful, did not make up for the places where Nikon, and Capture, fall down.



    Plain and simple: if I knew then what I know now about NEF and the history of Nikon with raw images, I might not have stayed with Nikon when I decided to get an SLR. And I /love/ Nikon products.



    Encrypting the file format details and giving me a single app from a single vendor that I can use to access those details smells like vendor lock-in to me. After spending nearly $2k, I'd at least expect the software to access the data to be complementary.



    This is my data, to be used under my terms. Anything else is unacceptable.

    John,



    I certainly will defend NX only to the point of there being a couple of good features in it--otherwise it sucks dead bunnies through a straw. It has the poorest, slowest, most archaic UI of any app ever designed that I know of, and I have been doing digital since day one. But, it is a step up from Capture!



    Having said that, however, I also have to say that not knowing that would be the case with Nikon Software is equally inexcusable. If you did any research, or visited DPR to get aquainted with all things Nikon, etc, you should have quickly been exposed to Nikon's terrible reputation for godawful proprietary software--and they are not alone in that, but they have the unmitigated gall to charge for it!



    Fortunately, Nikon users (35 years for me) are not stuck with Capture or NX.

    LR won't import PSD files without...

    I have imported most of my library into LR successfully. However, I realised that all of my files already processed in PS will not import. I am using a mac, and hence none of my file names have extensions. I have always made sure that the 'maximise compatibilty' option was either switched on or selected at save time.



    When I manually added the .psd extension to some of my file names, they imported successfuly.



    Why won't LR import PS files without an extension? Photoshop imports files without extensions.



    Confused.



    Hope this is not a really dumb question.



    Thanks, anyone.



    Steve.
    LR won't import PSD files without...
    I can relate! I imported about 5,000 camera files (raws, jpegs, tiffs) with no problems. Then I created a separate library for my edited files, which are mostly saved as Photoshop files with layers intact and backwards compatibility. Since I've always been on Macs, these files have normal titles, for example ''Blue Wall.'' When I try to import these files into LR, it says ''No photos were found to import.'' If I take one of those files and add ''.psd'' to the end of the existing title, then, as you discovered, I can import it.



    But it gets even better: if I add the extension and then rename the file yet again to eliminate the extension, I can still import it into LR! So ''Blue Wall'' will work fine if it has been named ''Blue Wall.psd'' in the finder and then renamed ''Blue Wall'' still in the finder. I suppose that I can do this to all my edited files, but man, that's gonna be a lot of work.



    Any ideas?



    -- greg
    LR won't import PSD files without...
    Greg, I haven't done very much with it but my understanding is that the Automator is designed to do just this sort of thing. Seems like if you moved all of your .psd files (w/o extension) to one folder you could create something that would add the extension you need.



    Just a suggestion, like I said I haven't done much with Automator.



    Rusty

    I am half way through manually adding the 'psd' extension to my files. Luckily I only have a few hundred or so to go. I am sure you can do it (adding the file extension) with Apple script, but I don't know how to do it, never having used it before. Looked at Automator, but couldn't see a way to do it.



    I think this is a big oversight by Adobe with this app. An Adobe photographic application that cannot open it's own (adobe) file format unless it has the extension added to it.



    Steve

    I've noticed something similar on Windows. I have a lot of RAW files and many .PSD files with the same name that required addition edits beyond what I could do in RAW. What I've found out is that Lightroom won't import two files that have the same name but a different extension.



    This is a big problem for me and I really hope Adobe changes it eventually.



    At the moment, I just use Lightroom to process new work, but I'm not using it at a ''master library'' for this reason.

    %26gt;What I've found out is that Lightroom won't import two files that have the same name but a different extension.



    LR will import them if they are in different folders. Segregate by extension, import and then move to folders as you want.



    Don



    Don Ricklin, MacBook 1.83Ghz Duo 2 Core running 10.4.9 %26amp; Win XP, Pentax *ist D

    http://donricklin.blogspot.com/

    RGB Absolute Values

    I did a search for ''RGB values'' and didn't find anything, so I am sorry if this has been addressed before...

    I use a GretagMacbeth ColorChecker in my shoots and the RGB percentages that are displayed in Lightroom are not as helpful as the RGB absolute values. Is there a way to change the display to the actual numbers? It's a little unfriendly to have to calculate the percentages by hand.

    I just purchased Lightroom and have a big learning curve.RGB Absolute Values
    %26gt; Is there a way to change the display to the actual numbers?

    No. LR is using 16 bit ProPhoto chromaticities in linear gamma internally. Thus, any ''actual numbers'' would be meaningless relative to what something like PS puts out.RGB Absolute Values
    Does this make the GretagMacbeth ColorChecker meaningless in Lightroom? How about CIELAB?
    You can still use the color checker in a couple of ways. Since there are scripts available, you can use them to determine calibration settings in ACR, then copy those to LR. Or you can export from LR and use an editor to examine your images.
    I'm not familiar with the scripts you mentioned. Where are these available? I'll need to look into these suggestions, but it sounds like a considerable interruption to the workflow. I was hoping to make most of the color corrections and applying them before editing in Photoshop. I am now worrying a little that Lightroom may not have been the wisest purchase.
    What are you seeking to achieve Mark?
    Tom Fors will be releasing his brand new calibration script for Camera Raw 4 any day now (maybe even today). Check PhotoshopNews.com for the announcement.

    Once you have nailed your per camera calibration, you can import the resulting raw file into Lightroom and ''capture'' the calibration settings to create a camera specific calibration setting you can apply to all other images at import.

    And yes, from the standpoint of RGB numbers, the %'s in Lightroom are different than any other app because, well, Lightroom is different than any other app.

    :~)
    Jeff is it possible that something like this be developed to create the camera calibration directly in LR. That would be great.
    What I am seeking to achieve is setting the white balance and exposure in the first picture (taken with a WhiBal and a ColorChecker) and applying them to the rest of the series in Lightroom. White balance is easy, and I know what the grey scale in the ColorChecker is supposed to be with the 8 bit RGB or CIELAB numbers that GretagMacbeth supplies with it. I was hoping to do all this before going into Photoshop, but I guess this isn't one of Lightroom's strengths.
    %26gt; What I am seeking to achieve is setting the white balance and exposure in the first picture (taken with a WhiBal and a ColorChecker) and applying them to the rest of the series in Lightroom.

    Why not just use the WB eyedropper on the first image, and then sync (or copy and paste) the white balance information from that image to the rest?
    Lee,
    That is step one of my process. I was hoping to adjust the shadows and highlights to get the grey scale on the ColorChecker in line before I synced them up.
    Hi Mark,

    Bruce Lindbloom has created a TIF file in LAB space using calculated values for the Gretag Macbeth ColorChecker. You can download it from this page:

    http://www.brucelindbloom.com/ColorCheckerRGB.html

    You can import it directly into Lightroom. You still wont see the RGB values, but you will have an exact reference for what the percentages should be. No more calculating needed :)

    I put it in a collection called ''Reference Targets'' so I can always find it quickly.

    -Chris
    Thanks Chris!

    That will definately help. I wouldn't mind a future release of Lightroom having the option of RGB percentage or LAB space. I have a feeling I'm not going to be placing a lot of emphasis on the ColorChecker values though... at least for the moment, until I learn the software. I just purchased Photoshop CS3 on Friday, and Lightroom on Saturday. It looks like I got Lightroom just before the price increase!

    I am pretty much a newby when it comes to digital photography, and still trying to find the best software for me. This purchase will replace: Elements 4, Bibble Pro, Capture One LX, and possibly Nikon Capture NX. I'm suprised that this early in the game I feel I hit the limitations of that software. Photoshop makes my head spin though! It's a whole different world!
    Mark-

    Many of us die-hard Camera Raw users who have been working with Lightroom since the early beta's initially revolted against the percentage concept. But to be honest, I can't say as that I've really missed the RGB readouts. Other than for calibration (for which I use Tom Fors script) purposes, I rarely, if ever have to rely on actual numerical RGB values.

    So yeah, it takes a little getting use to but unless you're going for a very specific targeted output value (in which case I'd say stick with Camera Raw %26amp; Photoshop), they just aren't (IMHO) that big of a deal for everyday work.

    And like Jeff said, it's a whole different kind of workflow.
    Jeff,

    Will Tom Fors calibration script be announcd on the home page? Looking at all the links on the right hand side I doubt I will ever find it otherwise!
    You can find it here-

    http://fors.net/chromoholics/
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