Capture One Export to PS CC issues
Hi!
I just changed to Capture One Pro. I worked on some films scans today and noted two things when opening the exported tiffs in Photoshop CC:
1) The image looks different when exported as tiff or psd. For example: Grad filters are amplified when opening as tiff, but OK as psd. Opening the tiff in GIMP works fine, that looks exactly like C1.
2) Photoshop opens the tiffs (and jpegs) exported from C1 with Camera Raw, and reads it as 8 bit (but export was in 16 bit).
3) psd exports are the size specified upon export. Tiffs opened in PS are smaller.
4) The same issues appear when using the "edit with" function. Silver Efex takes the file without issues, however.
I personally can do without PS/LR for a film workflow, but people that use my tiffs for print/publication are using it, and I am starting to wonder what they see when they open the files I send them a tiff or jpeg.
Ideas what is going on here?
I just changed to Capture One Pro. I worked on some films scans today and noted two things when opening the exported tiffs in Photoshop CC:
1) The image looks different when exported as tiff or psd. For example: Grad filters are amplified when opening as tiff, but OK as psd. Opening the tiff in GIMP works fine, that looks exactly like C1.
2) Photoshop opens the tiffs (and jpegs) exported from C1 with Camera Raw, and reads it as 8 bit (but export was in 16 bit).
3) psd exports are the size specified upon export. Tiffs opened in PS are smaller.
4) The same issues appear when using the "edit with" function. Silver Efex takes the file without issues, however.
I personally can do without PS/LR for a film workflow, but people that use my tiffs for print/publication are using it, and I am starting to wonder what they see when they open the files I send them a tiff or jpeg.
Ideas what is going on here?
0
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With regards to bullet points 2 and 4:
This is likely an issue with ACR due to the setting to handle JPG or TIF files. It seems ACR’s new default is to handle files that it deems to “have adjustmentsâ€, which it presumes to be stored in XMP files. If there is an XMP in the same directory as the JPG or TIF and you open it with Photoshop, ACR presumes it needs to handle the file rather than sending it directly to Photoshop. You can disable this under the ACR settings, set JPG and/or TIF handling to Never. Alternatively, you can put the JPG or TIF in a folder where there is no associated XMP file.0 -
Hi Ben!
Thanks for the reply. Moving the tiffs to another folder did not do the trick - opening the files with PS from a USB stick showed the same problem. BUT: Disabling tiff support in Camera RAW worked and solved the issue.
Best,
Peter0
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