grainyvision
Subscriber
Not usually over in this section of the forum, but hopefully someone can help me. I'm using latest 2022 Photoshop and Camera Raw on Mac OSX (Apple silicon). I have a particular workflow for processing DSLR film scans. I'm working from Olympus "ORF" raw files. Basically my desired process:
* crop and/or straighten
* flip horizontally, (sometimes) rotate
* invert
* apply levels adjustment layer
* adjust levels layer a bit
* save and move onto the next file in the folder
My current process for doing this:
* Run the folder through "image processor"
* Crop as part of camera raw using the "open first image" option
* Create a different action per format to apply a different crop, straighten, rotate, etc
* as part of the above action, also do the invert and levels adjustment
For crop/straighten, each batch is a tiny bit different due to scanner adjustments, format changes, etc. So I can't really consistently put this into an action without creating a new action for each batch, which kinda defeats the purpose.
I'd really like to simplify this process. What I've tried to do:
* Run the folder through image processor
* Crop, flip, and rotate in camera raw as part of the "open first image" option
* Apply a single generic invert-levels adjustment action
Which I would think would work, but surprisingly just doesn't. Specifically what instead happens:
* First image is processed correctly
* Any images with pre-existing .xmp files also processed correctly
* Images without a pre-existing .xmp file will have the action for invert-levels applied appropriately, and will be cropped. However, the image will not be rotated, flipped, or straightened
I feel like I'm losing my mind trying to find out why this happens. Even if I save a preset with all of these orientation changes etc (and using "check all" to make sure every single raw setting is saved in the preset), the flip, rotate, and straighten part of my process is not saved. These actions ARE saved in the .xmp file though! If I have an xmp with rotation, when the raw file is opened, it'll default to being rotated etc.
Is this some kind of bug? Is there a better way I can be doing this!? What is even happening here!?
* crop and/or straighten
* flip horizontally, (sometimes) rotate
* invert
* apply levels adjustment layer
* adjust levels layer a bit
* save and move onto the next file in the folder
My current process for doing this:
* Run the folder through "image processor"
* Crop as part of camera raw using the "open first image" option
* Create a different action per format to apply a different crop, straighten, rotate, etc
* as part of the above action, also do the invert and levels adjustment
For crop/straighten, each batch is a tiny bit different due to scanner adjustments, format changes, etc. So I can't really consistently put this into an action without creating a new action for each batch, which kinda defeats the purpose.
I'd really like to simplify this process. What I've tried to do:
* Run the folder through image processor
* Crop, flip, and rotate in camera raw as part of the "open first image" option
* Apply a single generic invert-levels adjustment action
Which I would think would work, but surprisingly just doesn't. Specifically what instead happens:
* First image is processed correctly
* Any images with pre-existing .xmp files also processed correctly
* Images without a pre-existing .xmp file will have the action for invert-levels applied appropriately, and will be cropped. However, the image will not be rotated, flipped, or straightened
I feel like I'm losing my mind trying to find out why this happens. Even if I save a preset with all of these orientation changes etc (and using "check all" to make sure every single raw setting is saved in the preset), the flip, rotate, and straighten part of my process is not saved. These actions ARE saved in the .xmp file though! If I have an xmp with rotation, when the raw file is opened, it'll default to being rotated etc.
Is this some kind of bug? Is there a better way I can be doing this!? What is even happening here!?