7 Messages
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250 Points
Tue, May 24, 2011 9:12 PM
Not planned
5
Lightroom: support for un-maximized PSDs
I saw a post in 2009 about this, but nothing since. Lightroom NEEDS to support Unmaximized PSDs in some form or another. Right now they are invisible to Lightroom!
A multilayered photo file can be 200MB Un-Maximized, yet it's only 89 MB Maximized.
I'd even settle for saving a small composite image in the PSD that Lightroom can use.
As the guy said in 2009 - It's PHOTOSHOP LIGHTROOM, how can Lightroom completely ignore files native to Photoshop?
A multilayered photo file can be 200MB Un-Maximized, yet it's only 89 MB Maximized.
I'd even settle for saving a small composite image in the PSD that Lightroom can use.
As the guy said in 2009 - It's PHOTOSHOP LIGHTROOM, how can Lightroom completely ignore files native to Photoshop?
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3 years ago
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unmaximized
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Responses
lee_jay_fingersh
946 Messages
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13.8K Points
10 years ago
Maximize forces PS to render an image using its resources, and Lightroom can then read that image from the file and thus avoid having to render it itself.
I would be very annoyed if LR increased in size by a huge factor just to support this one feature.
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mikepalmer_2298965
7 Messages
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250 Points
10 years ago
Right now maximized is 200+ MB, Unmazimized is 89MB. I'll settle for 90MB with a 1MB composite image. I would not expect LR to be able to make changes to the file.
It's ludicrous to waste 100+ MB just so LR can see it.
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steve_sprengel
Champion
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2.6K Messages
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33.7K Points
10 years ago
Is there a reason you're insisting on Adobe adding a feature to LR instead of using existing features of Photoshop in your workflow to accomplish the same thing?
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mikepalmer_2298965
7 Messages
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250 Points
10 years ago
It just seems amazing to me that LR can't see my PSDs unless they are more than twice as big as they need to be.
Isn't the maximize option supposed to put a composite file in there for other apps to use? If so, why is it so big?
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andrew_rodney
1.9K Messages
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22.8K Points
10 years ago
Exactly. That’s why I never use PSD and always TIFF. There’s nothing PSD provides, other than duotone support that TIFF doesn’t as far as I know. Add Zip compression, the files are smaller albeit slower to open and save. TIFF is an open format, vastly more compatible in other applications. PSD is a proprietary format. Why use PSD?
Author “Color Management for Photographers"
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mikepalmer_2298965
7 Messages
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250 Points
10 years ago
Again, I just don't see what the problem is with Adobe providing some compatibility with unmaximized files for two apps that are supposed to work closely together.
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andrew_rodney
1.9K Messages
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22.8K Points
10 years ago
Author “Color Management for Photographers"
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steve_sprengel
Champion
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2.6K Messages
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33.7K Points
10 years ago
What are the dimensions in Pixels of the PSD? Do you need the PSD to work on in Photoshop after you edit a copy in LR, or is it just a stage in your workflow that isn't optimal, yet, and Photoshop won't need to see it, anymore after LR sees it?
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mikepalmer_2298965
7 Messages
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250 Points
10 years ago
The maximized file is 208MB, the unmaximized file is 89MB. Pixel size is 2448 x 4288.
I organize in Lightroom, but do re-touching in Photoshop. It's not unusual to re-edit in Photoshop several times, so lightroom needs to be able to see the edited file.
Up until recently I didn't save the layers so compatability wasn;t a problem. But a new work flow has everything done in layers and saving them makes sense for future edits.
I can tolerate a few extra MB for compatibility, but a 120MB compatibility penalty is a lot.
It's worth noting that Adobe Illustrator can read the non-maximized file, though it collapses thd layers. Is it asking too much for Lightroom to do the same?
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john_beardsworth
1.3K Messages
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22.5K Points
10 years ago
However, that is a bit brutal and I agree it is right to expect to be able to import particularly these PSD files. Regardless of whether LR can display a thumbnail or preview, users expect LR to help them manage picture files.
In the interim, how many files are involved? Wouldn't it be best to (a) convert them to TIFs with an action/droplet and (b) get more disc space?
John
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mikepalmer_2298965
7 Messages
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250 Points
10 years ago
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mikepalmer_2298965
7 Messages
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250 Points
10 years ago
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artman
3 Messages
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86 Points
9 years ago
This is close to being a deal breaker.
Bridge has always had this functionality and it seems ludicrous that LR does not. There is surely some way to add this feature without bloating LR. Given that my CS5 folder is nearly 400mb and my LR folder is 50mb, tripling LR's size as was suggested might happen would be nothing compared to adding the MaxComp bloat to every PSD file.
Make it an add-on that can be downloaded by those of us who don't mind incurring a one time disk-space penalty to have LR behave as it should have in the first place.
Please.
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mike_palmer_2694373
3 Messages
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80 Points
9 years ago
All this speculation about the size of Lightroom ballooning to fully support un-maximized files is also silly; the Bridge executable is only 12MB, so why would Lightroom gain much weight?
While I appreciate all the band-aide solutions offered here, they are NOT viable solutions. They a) waste incredible amounts of disk space and b) waste a lot of time reading and writing the huge disk files. (Every save takes 5 times longer!)
Adobe, fix it please!
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andrew_rodney
1.9K Messages
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22.8K Points
9 years ago
>Bridge can read un-maximized psd files, so it is outrageous that Photoshop can't.
Reading (seeing a preview) and editing the data are quite different tasks.
Author “Color Management for Photographers"
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