Forums
New posts
Search forums
What's new
New posts
New media
New media comments
New profile posts
Latest activity
Media
New media
New comments
Search media
Members
Current visitors
New profile posts
Search profile posts
Log in
Register
What's new
Search
Search
Search titles only
By:
New posts
Search forums
Menu
Log in
Register
Install the app
Install
Forums
Learning
Computers and Software
Nik Collection?
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Reply to thread
Message
<blockquote data-quote="BackdoorArts" data-source="post: 451662" data-attributes="member: 9240"><p>Don, not to derail things, but there's <em>never</em> a reason to go from LR to Bridge. LR <strong><em>is</em></strong> ACR, so do your edits in the Develop module, right-click and then select <strong>Edit In -> Adobe Photoshop CC 2014</strong>. Save yourself a step and the ACR edits get saved in the LR catalog. That's the way I do it using PS layers to track the Nik changes.</p><p></p><p>If you don't have PS then you wind up creating new TIFF files for each "layer". It's more cumbersome, but I believe from a space point of view you're not using all that much more space since each layer in PS is a new copy of the image. Delete TIFF's as you'd drop and merge layers. Not nearly as neat, but definitely doable.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BackdoorArts, post: 451662, member: 9240"] Don, not to derail things, but there's [I]never[/I] a reason to go from LR to Bridge. LR [B][I]is[/I][/B] ACR, so do your edits in the Develop module, right-click and then select [B]Edit In -> Adobe Photoshop CC 2014[/B]. Save yourself a step and the ACR edits get saved in the LR catalog. That's the way I do it using PS layers to track the Nik changes. If you don't have PS then you wind up creating new TIFF files for each "layer". It's more cumbersome, but I believe from a space point of view you're not using all that much more space since each layer in PS is a new copy of the image. Delete TIFF's as you'd drop and merge layers. Not nearly as neat, but definitely doable. [/QUOTE]
Verification
Post reply
Forums
Learning
Computers and Software
Nik Collection?
Top