Process Recipes jpg.cos
Every time I use the Process Recipe it exports all the images but then it creates a folder named Capture One- Settings110 then exports all images in jpg.cos
Thank you for any advise.
Thank you for any advise.
0
-
The .cos file is an image settings file that Capture One produces to store any adjustments to the image. I presume that you are getting the .jpg file as well. Whenever you even look at a folder with images in it using Capture One, it creates these in a subfolder.
Ian0 -
Thank you, Ian
Yes, it exports the .jpg. How do I not get that Capture One folder on export?0 -
As Ian has said you will get the "edit" files if you open the jpg files within C1.
I have jpgs set to a different default viewer application (using Windows) partly to avoid that and partly because I think of it as a quick check for how the images would be seen in a browser, etc. Just in case something strange might happen from time to time.
Plus the viewer I use is fast and portable to some quite low spec hardware that I take when travelling light.
Grant0 -
well i learned something new today lol 0 -
[quote="SFA" wrote:
As Ian has said you will get the "edit" files if you open the jpg files within C1.
I have jpgs set to a different default viewer application (using Windows) partly to avoid that and partly because I think of it as a quick check for how the images would be seen in a browser, etc. Just in case something strange might happen from time to time.
Plus the viewer I use is fast and portable to some quite low spec hardware that I take when travelling light.
Grant
I'm curious Grant, which viewer are you using?
The Window 'Photos' image viewer isn't color managed as far as I can tell so I don't trust it, and I've used a few others that get me by, but I don't love them for what ever reason. I've got used to mac's built in preview, just press the space bar and a color correct image preview pops up. Haven't found anything like that for windows.0 -
[quote="cdc" wrote:
[quote="SFA" wrote:
As Ian has said you will get the "edit" files if you open the jpg files within C1.
I have jpgs set to a different default viewer application (using Windows) partly to avoid that and partly because I think of it as a quick check for how the images would be seen in a browser, etc. Just in case something strange might happen from time to time.
Plus the viewer I use is fast and portable to some quite low spec hardware that I take when travelling light.
Grant
I'm curious Grant, which viewer are you using?
The Window 'Photos' image viewer isn't color managed as far as I can tell so I don't trust it, and I've used a few others that get me by, but I don't love them for what ever reason. I've got used to mac's built in preview, just press the space bar and a color correct image preview pops up. Haven't found anything like that for windows.
Faststone - portable version for Windows so I can run it from a memory stick if I need to.
I still use Windows 7 though. I assume there is a version for Win 10 for those that have it.
Grant0 -
[quote="SFA" wrote:
Faststone - portable version for Windows so I can run it from a memory stick is I need to.
I still use Windows 7 though. I assume there is a version for Win 10 for those that have it.
Grant
I haven't tried that one.
I'll check it out.
Thank you!0 -
Thank you everyone. 0
Post ist für Kommentare geschlossen.
Kommentare
8 Kommentare