Quote:
Originally Posted by Roy C
On my version of CS4, when you open a jpeg in bridge you go straight into CS4 and not ACR. I have not got a clue what you are taking about when you say 'that can be opened in RAW via BRIDGE' Nor am I particularly interested.
When I made my post I was responding to a post that you made which suggesting that if the RAW file was too big then he could convert to a TIFF which made no sense whatsoever to me as the TIFF file would have been bigger.
Please forget the tutorial onj my account as I am not interested.
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Firstly you are interest or you would not bother replying to the post in the first place.
Secondly when you made the reply you jumped the gun as i corrected myself and you did not read it as i have already stated.
You are correct, you obviously took note about an original JPEG that it does not retain raw data and goes straight to photoshop.
What you keep MISSING is that you can save a RAW file as a JPEG and it will retain the RAW data as it was originally shot in RAW.
A quick tutorial for you.
This is how it works-
1. Open the RAW file in Photoshop.
2. Save as JPEG or TIFF (i won't get into the tiff side as i don't want to loose you)so we will stick with the JPEG
3. Now you send the JPEG (Remember the converted RAW File) to friend.
4. The friend saves to where ever they prefer.
5. The friend opens in Bridge.
6. The friend now opens in RAW by one of the two way command/control "R" (the short cut. Command for Mac control for P.C users) or file, camera raw.
7. The friend now has the JPEG file open in RAW with the RAW data intact.
Try It, Its something new for you and If your not Interested then that's no problem but I'm sure there are people out there willing to learn new techniques just like myself.