Re: filter for digitized images

Robert Hershoff (mailto:hershoff@BIRD.LIBRARY.ARIZONA.EDU)
Sat, 25 Apr 1998 09:39:56 -0700

Message-Id: <199804251638.JAA55784@dns.ccit.arizona.edu>
Date:         Sat, 25 Apr 1998 09:39:56 -0700
From: Robert Hershoff <mailto:hershoff@BIRD.LIBRARY.ARIZONA.EDU>
Subject:      Re: filter for digitized images
To: mailto:IMAGELIB@LISTSERV.ARIZONA.EDU

April 25, 1998

Photoshop 4 has a scripting feature that will facilitate batch processing of your 3000 images. If you are certain that the settings will be the same for each image adjustment, record a script with the actions you require on a one sample image, then save the actions and apply the resulting script to the 3000 image batch. No user intervention required. Photoshop will open, adjust, rename and save each edited image according to your specifications.

If each image will need some custom adjustment, you can design the script to pause at the custom step and then continue automatically after you have made the adjustment.

This is very easy to do. Please contact me privately for more information.

Regards,

Robert

***************************************************** Robert Hershoff / The University of Arizona Library Main Library Room A304 / 1510 E. University Boulevard P.O. Box 210055 / Tucson, AZ 85721-0055 voice (520) 626-7415 / fax (520) 621-9733 e-mail: mailto:hershoff@bird.library.arizona.edu *****************************************************

On Thu, 23 Apr 1998, Wolfgang Mueller, _CMB wrote:

> Dear listmembers,
>
> I have digitized 3000 images using a ccd digital camera. I took shots of the
> slides that were positioned on a slide-viewer table. the images tend to be
> yellowish the more light areas are in it. I used the PhotoShop
> "Image-Adjust-Auto Levels" comand to turn the image back into more realistic
> colors, which works pretty good (not that I know why and what it does, I
> just happened to try it).
>
> Now, here are my questions:
> Did anyone experience the same?
> Is there a batch method of applying this filter to more images? (one by one
> is quite a job with 3000).
>
> I would appreciate your help.
>
> Regards,
> Wolfgang Mueller
> mailto:wm@telecom.at
>