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EXIF layered on to image?
Win7 ult, Win8 pro, Photoshop 6
When comparing a series of photos taken with varying f-stops, ISOs, shutter speeds, RAW, etc I need to have ths EXIF data layered on to the image so that I can compare the camera & lens optimums. Where in Photoshop is the EXIF data presented so as to be copied & pasted on to the images? Peter |
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EXIF layered on to image?
On 2015-07-13 02:59:57 +0000, Peter Jason said:
Win7 ult, Win8 pro, Photoshop 6 When comparing a series of photos taken with varying f-stops, ISOs, shutter speeds, RAW, etc I need to have ths EXIF data layered on to the image so that I can compare the camera & lens optimums. Where in Photoshop is the EXIF data presented so as to be copied & pasted on to the images? Peter In Photoshop you can get the file data from File-File Info. However, in the Develop module of Lightroom by toggling the "i" key. Hit it once you get the file name with capture date and time, with pixel dimensions. Hit it a second time and you get the file name, the exposure details, and the lens details. Hit it a third time and the print is gone. Note: Photoshop does not do this. https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/1295663/FileChute/screenshot_217.jpg -- Regards, Savageduck |
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EXIF layered on to image?
On Sun, 12 Jul 2015 20:34:41 -0700, Savageduck
wrote: On 2015-07-13 02:59:57 +0000, Peter Jason said: Win7 ult, Win8 pro, Photoshop 6 When comparing a series of photos taken with varying f-stops, ISOs, shutter speeds, RAW, etc I need to have ths EXIF data layered on to the image so that I can compare the camera & lens optimums. Where in Photoshop is the EXIF data presented so as to be copied & pasted on to the images? Peter In Photoshop you can get the file data from File-File Info. Thanks, this allows the cut/paste of E.G. 1/200 sec; f/10; ISO 100 onto the image, and this will do for now. For the lens I'm using... http://www.dpreview.com/products/oly...y_70-300_4-5p6 I want to balance ISO with f-Stop to get a sharp image (with tripod) and f9 & ISO400 is working OK. f5.6 is not so sharp. Also Exposure Bias -0.7 allows faster shots. All this I'm trying to optimize for a given lens. However, in the Develop module of Lightroom by toggling the "i" key. Hit it once you get the file name with capture date and time, with pixel dimensions. Hit it a second time and you get the file name, the exposure details, and the lens details. Hit it a third time and the print is gone. Note: Photoshop does not do this. https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/1295663/FileChute/screenshot_217.jpg |
#4
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EXIF layered on to image?
In article , Peter Jason
wrote: Win7 ult, Win8 pro, Photoshop 6 do you mean photoshop cs6? photoshop 6 is ancient and will not run properly windows 7 or 8. it won't even install if the hard drive is too big. When comparing a series of photos taken with varying f-stops, ISOs, shutter speeds, RAW, etc I need to have ths EXIF data layered on to the image so that I can compare the camera & lens optimums. Where in Photoshop is the EXIF data presented so as to be copied & pasted on to the images? Peter the proper solution is to use lightroom, which will overlay exif data automatically. also in lightroom, you can query which photos to display based on f/stop, shutter speed, lens choice, location, date or whatever else. you could, for example, look at all images taken at f/8 in the past month. as for photoshop cs6, it's file/file info... in the camera data tab. the text is copyable, but do you really want to invoke that panel and copy/paste for every single photo?? that's a ****load of work which is entirely unnecessary. |
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