Batch Processing with REVIVE Colors

You need help to start ? Or to use a plugin ? Use the tutorials ! / Ĉu vi bezonas helpon por starti ? Aŭ por uzi etendadon ? Usu la Didaktikojn !

Modérateur : Modérateurs

stormtigers
Nouveau(elle)|Nouveau|Nouvelle
Nouveau(elle)|Nouveau|Nouvelle
Messages : 2
Inscription : 22 avr. 2021 0:00
Version de PhotoFiltre : 7
Système d'exploitation : Windows 10
Processeur : i7 Pentium
Mémoire RAM : 16gb

Batch Processing with REVIVE Colors

Message par stormtigers »

Greetings Everyone
I love Photofiltre and have been using it since V6 to create graphical tribute to WW2 troops of Australia.
So much simpler than Photoshop and quite powerful.
However, I made the uneducated mistake of saving my tributes in JPEG format initially.
Mistake because as I found out just recently everytime I edited or amended one the colors started to fade a little due to recompression every time.

I have over 2,000 images that I wish to revive the colors off and have found (as a gneral comment) the revive colors function does a good job.

However to do over 2,000 manually is just not productive.

So my question is IN BATCH MODE
1. can I use the revive colors filter OR
2. can someone suggest another package to do so to the same approximate settings that Photofiltre uses OR
3. can you tell me what setting Photofiltre uses to o "revive colors" i.e saturation etc etc etc

Thank You

Ray
Antonio
Administrateur(trice)|Administrateur|Administratrice
Administrateur(trice)|Administrateur|Administratrice
Messages : 12790
Inscription : 28 oct. 2003 22:49

Re: Batch Processing with REVIVE Colors

Message par Antonio »

the revive color is just a saturation (+). Try with an image to have the best adjust
stormtigers
Nouveau(elle)|Nouveau|Nouvelle
Nouveau(elle)|Nouveau|Nouvelle
Messages : 2
Inscription : 22 avr. 2021 0:00
Version de PhotoFiltre : 7
Système d'exploitation : Windows 10
Processeur : i7 Pentium
Mémoire RAM : 16gb

Re: Batch Processing with REVIVE Colors

Message par stormtigers »

Thank you saturation between 10-20% seems to do the trick nicely.

:clap: