Real World Adobe® Photoshop® CS2 [Electronic resources] : Industrial-Strength Production Techniques نسخه متنی

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Real World Adobe® Photoshop® CS2 [Electronic resources] : Industrial-Strength Production Techniques - نسخه متنی

Bruce Fraser, David Blatner

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Recording Batch Actions


Writing actions for batch-processing raw images is relatively simple. You don't need to worry about making sure that the action can operate on files that already have layers or alpha channels, or that are in a color space other than RGB. You're always dealing with a known quantity.

Bear in mind that if your actions call other actions, the other actions must be loaded in Photoshop's Actions palette, or the calling action will fail when it can't find the action being called. An easy way to handle this is to make sure that any actions on which other actions are dependent are saved in the same set as the actions that depend on them.


Simple ActionSave as JPEG


Let's begin with a simple action that opens a raw image at its native resolution and saves it as a maximum-quality JPEG in the sRGB color space.


Creating an action and action set


Start out by creating a new action set called "Batch Processing" in which to save the actions you'll create Actions, Automate, and Scripting," in Chapter 12, Essential Image Techniques.)


Figure 11-79. Creating an action set

[View full size image]


Creating a new action


Before creating the action, select a raw image in Bridge that has already had custom Camera Raw settings applied. That way, once you've created the action, you can start recording immediately without recording any extraneous steps, such as selecting a file, and you can correctly record the Camera Raw Selected Image setting.

Now click the "Create new action" icon in Photoshop's Actions palette, enter a name (such as "Save as JPEG") for the action, and then click Record to dismiss the dialog and start recording the action.


Recording the Open step


Now that you're recording, switch back to Bridge and open the image in Camera Raw by pressing Command-O (you must open the image in Camera Raw hosted by Photoshop). The Camera Raw dialog box appears (see Figure 11-80).


Figure 11-80. Recording the Open step

Chapter 14, Multimedia and the Web).


Then click OK to open the image. (If the Profile Mismatch warning appears, click OK to dismiss it. This doesn't get recorded in the action, and anyway, you'll suppress the warning when you use the action in Batch.) The image opens, and the Open step appears on the Actions palette.


Recording the Save step


To record the Save step, choose Save As from the File menu, or press Command-Shift-S. The Save As dialog box appears. The filename and the destination for saving that you enter here has no impact on the batch processwe tend to use an obviously silly name such as "foo.jpg"and choose the Desktop as destination, to simplify cleanup.

In this example, make sure that the format is set to JPEG, and incorporate any other settings in this dialog box that you want to include in the action. Then click Save to proceed to the JPEG Options dialog box, set the desired quality, set the Format Options to Baseline (Standard) for maximum compatibility with JPEG-reading software, and then click OK. The file is saved on the Desktop as "foo.jpg," and the Save step appears in the Actions palette. Then close the open document so that a Close step appears in the Actions palette.


Stop and save


Finally, click the Stop button in the Actions palette to stop recording. Photoshop doesn't allow you to save individual actions to diskonly action sets. So if you want to save an action as soon as you've written it, you need to select the action set that contains it in the Actions palette and then choose Save Actions from the Actions palette flyout menu (see Figure 11-81).


Figure 11-81. Saving the action set

Tip: Go Ahead and Save Now

Note that until you save actions explicitly using the Save Actions command, they exist only in Photoshop's Preferences, and Photoshop's Preferences only get updated when you quit the application "normally" by using the Quit command. If Photoshop crashes, or you suffer a power outage, any unsaved actions will be lost. So if your actions are even slightly complex, it's a very good idea to save them before doing anything else. You can save actions anywhere, but if you want them to appear automatically in the Actions palette even after deleting Photoshop's preferences, save them in the Adobe Photoshop CS2/Presets/Photoshop Actions folder.

When you expand the steps in the Actions palette by clicking the triangles beside those that have them, you can see exactly what has been recorded for each step (see Figure 11-82). When you use this action in Batch with the appropriate overrides selected (see "Rules for Batch Processing," earlier in this chapter) the filenames and folder locations you recorded will be overridden by the settings in the Batch dialog box, and all the other settings you've recorded herethe Camera Raw workflow settings and the JPEG Save Optionswill be honored.


Figure 11-82. Save as JPEG action


Variants


You can create variants of this action by recording different Open or Save steps. For example, you can create larger JPEGs by changing the Size setting in the Camera Raw dialog box to one of the larger sizes, and you can embed thumbnails or create lower-quality JPEGs by making those settings in the Save As and JPEG Options dialog boxes, respectively. To save in a different format, with different options, just choose the desired format and options when you record the Save step.


Complex ActionSave for Edit


Now let's try a more complex example: an action that produces 16-bit/channel TIFFs with adjustment layers set up ready for final editing in Photoshop. It's designed for use on "hero" images that merit individual manual edits in Photoshop. It doesn't actually do any of the editing, because the required edits will almost certainly be different for each image in a batch. Instead, it simply does a lot of the repetitive grunt work involved in setting up an image for editing, so that when you open the image, all the necessary adjustment layers are already there, waiting for you to tweak them. (Or, if you don't need them, you can throw them away later.)


Create the new action


You can record this action in the same set as the previous one, since it's also designed for raw processing. As before, select a raw image in Bridge that has had custom Camera Raw settings applied before you start recording the new action. Then click the "Create new action" icon in the Actions palette, enter a name (such as "Save for Edit") in the New Action dialog box, and then click Record to start recording.


Recording the Open step


As before, start by launching Camera Raw from Bridge by pressing Command-O. In the Camera Raw dialog box, again make sure that Settings is set to Selected Image. This time, though, you'll make some different workflow settings.

In the Space menu, choose ProPhoto RGB, our preferred working space.

Set the Depth menu to 16/bit channel, because you'll want to make the edits in Photoshop in 16-bit/channel mode.

Set the Size menu to the camera's native resolution.

Enter 240 pixels per inch in the Resolution field, because you'll almost certainly check your edits by printing to an inkjet printer at 240 ppi (see Chapter 13, Image Storage and Output).


Then click OK to open the image. The image opens, and the Open step appears on the Actions palette.


Adding the edits


This action adds three different editing layers to the image before saving and closing; a Levels adjustment layer; a Curves adjustment layer; and a Hue/Saturation adjustment layer, as follows.

Add a Levels adjustment layer by choosing Levels from the New Adjustment Layer submenu (under the Layer menu). Just click OK to create a Levels adjustment layer that does not as yet apply any adjustments. Remember, you'll make the adjustments on an image-by-image basis in Photoshopthe action just does the grunt work of creating the layers.

Add two more adjustment layersa Curves layer, then a Hue/Saturation layerin both cases also clicking OK when the respective adjustment dialog boxes appear.



Recording the Save step


As before, choose Save As from the File menu, naming the file "foo" and save it on the Desktop for easy disposal after you're finished making the action. This time, choose TIFF as the format, make sure that the Layers and Embed Color Profile checkboxes are turned on (creating untagged ProPhoto RGB files is a Very Bad Idea). Then click Save to advance to the TIFF Options dialog box, and make your preferred settings. (Again, see Chapter 13, Image Storage and Output, for advice.)

Finally, close the image (so that the batch operation will do so, too), and click the Stop button in the Actions palette to stop recording. Figure 11-83 shows the resulting action in the Actions palette with all the steps expanded.


Figure 11-83. Save for Edit action

As with the earlier, simpler action, when you use this action in a batch process with the necessary overrides applied in the Batch dialog box, the filenames and locations will be overridden by the Batch settings, while everything else in the Open and Save steps will be honored.


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