Saturday, November 28
That's A Relief
Photoshop's batch processing allows me to apply multiple effects to each image, and save the results of each effect to a different director. So I can set the whole thing up to run as a single process.
So each time I add new images to the library, I don't have to run 40+ different batch jobs, just the one. Which is 40+ times less work for me.
Don't know if my CPU is ever going to forgive me, though.
Update: Must remember to include "close image" command at the end... Otherwise it doesn't.
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Photoshop's batch processing allows me to apply multiple effects to each image, and save the results of each effect to a different director. So I can set the whole thing up to run as a single process.
So each time I add new images to the library, I don't have to run 40+ different batch jobs, just the one. Which is 40+ times less work for me.
Don't know if my CPU is ever going to forgive me, though.
Update: Must remember to include "close image" command at the end... Otherwise it doesn't.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
10:40 PM
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1
Now all you need is a simple script to automatically apply the PhotoShop automation to any image dropped into a watched directory.
Posted by: Stephen Macklin at Sunday, November 29 2009 07:50 AM (R7LgM)
2
Yeah, I haven't worked out how to do that yet, but that would be extremely useful.
Probably easy on a Mac...
Probably easy on a Mac...
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Sunday, November 29 2009 12:10 PM (PiXy!)
3
Huh. You can embed Photoshop in a Visual Basic app and script it from there.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Sunday, November 29 2009 12:13 PM (PiXy!)
4
Or you can script it in AppleScript, JavaScript, or VBScript. I didn't know that. Neat!
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Sunday, November 29 2009 12:18 PM (PiXy!)
5
With the folder actions built into the system, watch folder functions built into apple script, and automator, it's pretty easy on a Mac. I've used it effectively for catalog production where you tend to get images in batches.
Posted by: Stephen Macklin at Monday, November 30 2009 02:22 AM (R7LgM)
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