![]() ![]() For example, when you use a token for image date, Capture One will fill in the date for each image individually. A token is a placeholder representing a specific kind of data, not the data itself. Tokens are the foundation of the advanced file naming in Capture One. Therefore file naming is inherently part of a photographer’s workflow. Before you open an image or look at its metadata, you have the most necessary information. The examples above show that a name is the primary means of identification of your image. even the best naming scheme for your archival purposes may mean nothing to those who receive or use them, so why not rename them on export or processing to “Norway holiday 2019-001 to -999”?.standard file names a camera gives to your pictures on a card have very little information and are often not unique renaming on import is where the name of your images start making sense.the images during a tethered shoot get their name in Capture One the name of the shoot, the client, the location, plus a sequence number helps to identify the images.Part 2 focuses on renaming on output.īut why bother about file naming anyway? Here are a few examples of file naming: You find Advanced File Naming in Capture One (part 2) here. You can name and rename during tethering and import, rename images in your Session or Catalog, and on output. ![]() This post – part 1 of 2 – helps you on the way.Ĭapture One offers sophisticated tools to set or change the name of your images and the folders you store them in. Learning to master its power is something different. File naming is important and the advanced file naming feature in Capture One is very powerful and used extensively in a professional workflow. You know the expression “What’s in a name?”, and the answer is: a lot. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |