History of changes
Is there a way to list all the changes to a picture that I have made, then allow me to disable them one by one?
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Currently no, there is not.
We are investigating such a "History" tool for future implementation but there is no ETA at this time.0 -
Thanks, sometimes when I revisit pics that I have edited before, I like to revert all changes (exposure, white balanace, sharpening), besides the CROP.
Is there a way to do this?0 -
Select the Image, right click and choose "New Variant".
A virtual copy of the RAW will reside next to the original without any adjustments.
You can then Copy/Paste only the crop from Image A to the new virtual copy Image B.0 -
FWIW before I adopted C1 for most of my editing I used another product that had introduced a comprehensive edit history facility. I still use it sometimes for specific purposes.
I concluded that the history facility was pointless in almost all situations for me. There was no easy way, nor likely to be one, to use the information successfully except at the lightest level of change recording - in which case it hardly offered any benefit anyway.
Fortunately the application offered a multiple version edit facility rather like C1's Variants and taking the time to create an edit file for each significant stage of an edit provided by far the most realistic way to be able to step back to a known point in a significant edit session.
The one thing that C1 misses in some ways is the ability to turn an adjustment tool on and off on a permanent basis - as can be achieved with Adjustment layers for example. In fact now and again it might be useful to be able to deploy multiple version of a tool (without the need for a layer) where one version could be "active" for assessment rather than creating a separate variant - a quick way to see the effects of a different setting for a specific tool in effect "overlayed". Currently the temporary elimination of the effect is working on the same principle but it would sometimes be handy to be able to compare 2 or more adjustments in the same way for single tools.
For more than that the multiple variant approach seems to be a better solution.
A few observations for what they are worth.
Grant0
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