Subject | Re: Lenses and sharpening |
From | Sandman |
Date | 09/19/2014 14:05 (09/19/2014 14:05) |
Message-ID | <slrnm1o7fj.c40.mr@irc.sandman.net> |
Client | |
Newsgroups | rec.photo.digital |
Follows | Eric Stevens |
Followups | Whisky-dave (57m) > Sandman Eric Stevens (14h & 37m) > Sandman |
That's what I just said. All adjustments you do are always done to the pixels of a preview file on disk. Exporting is not a paremeter. The original file is always left untouched.Eric StevensEric StevensSandman
All they have done up to this point is create a list of edits and view a simulacrum of their effect in screen. They haven't actually edited the image.
Yes, they have. All adjustments are being applied to a preview file as you do them. The original file is untouched at *all times*, at no point in time is it edited in any way.
At least until you export. Even then the riginal isnot touched: it's all done to a copy.
I know. That's the *entire point*. You know nothing about these things, yet here you are arguing.SandmanEric Stevens
Same with Photoshop and smart filters. All filters are added in the program and the original image data is kept intact at all times. If you "export" it from Photoshop in an image format that supports smart filters (such as TIFF), the reciever can reverse the process at any time, since the original image data is kept 100% intact.
I don't know enough to comment on that.
You shouldn't be. A simulacrum is a representation of something else. Like a voodoo doll or a scale model. A simulacrum is an imitation. The preview file is exactly like the would-be exported JPG file. It's the same. Nothing is different. In fact, you can export JPG's from LR that are *lesser* than the preview file, which would be the simulacrum if anything.Eric StevensSandmannospamEric Stevens
they resume working on the image and decide to reverse what they did the day before.
So they change the list of edits and againview the changed simulacrum which results.
No "simulacrum" involved, Eric. Stop using words you don't understand.
You called it a preview file. Either way - I'm happy.
It could be, sure. It's an ordinary JPG, and most printer drivers can handle them just fine. Again, you don't know what you're talking about.Eric StevensThey haven't actually created any image to be changed at either point. That oonly happens once they execute the list of edits by exporting the image.Sandman
Incorrect. Do you really think that Lightroom will display thousands of edited images in grid view by applying all adjustments in realtime? Of course not. All adjustments are applied to preview files that are saved to disk. That's the image data you're looking at.
But it's not the same as the file you would - say - send to a printer.
Depends on how you export it. If you export it as a low-res highly compressed JPG, it can use the preview file. Chances are that it doesn't, but it certainly could, since the preview file *is* the current pixel data of the image.SandmanEric Stevens
The *only* point Lightroom loads the original file and applies the rendering chain in RAM is when you're viewing an image in 100% zoom.
Or when you export the image.
The original file remains untouched, regardless of how many times you export versions of it - hence everything is 100% reversible.Eric StevensSandmannospamEric Stevens
with a non-destructive workflow, they can do that. without a non-destructive workflow, the changes cannot be reversed.
Once they have executed the list of edits by exporting a file the changes can't generally be reversed either.
Sure they can, the original file is untouched and everything can be reversed.
The exported file is an edited copy of the original file.
You are proposing producing a differently edited copy of the original file. That's not reversing an edit: that's a new edit.Incorrect - I am correctly stating that everything you do in LR is 100% reversible.
When you export, the preview file has already been made. You can not export a file from LR that does not have a preview file.Eric StevensSandmanEric StevensAnd I have pointed out that you cannot reverse a change which has not actually been made. Even if it is reversible, you can't reverse something before you have done it.nospam
the change *has* been made, just not to the pixels themselves.
And to what has the change been made?
To the pixels. nospam is incorrect here. All LR adjustments are applied to a preview file and saved to disk.
Except when you export.
No, only you. This post is case in point - you know absolutely nothing about these things.Eric StevensSandmannospamEric Stevens
as i said, you're confused.
I'm confused?
Very much so.
I think we are all confused.