Bleed Area When Printing Photos

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Today’s Question: I recently ordered a mousepad featuring one of my photos, and was surprised when it arrived that the photo was cropped around all edges. How can I make sure that the entire photo is shown when printed like this?

Tim’s Quick Answer: When printing a photo where the image goes all the way to the edge of the media (such as a mousepad or paper print) there will always be a small degree of cropping for the image to make the borderless print possible. The only other cropping that would occur is if the image didn’t match the aspect ratio of the print.

More Detail: A borderless print involves an image that goes all the way to the edge of the media, whether that’s a print on photo paper or some other media, such as a photo mousepad. However, it is basically impossible to perfectly print a photo right to the edge of the media without losing at least a small portion of the image. Either the photo would be printed partially off the edge (such as with a borderless photo inkjet print) or the borderless effect would be created by cutting after printing (causing a small portion of the image to be lost in the process).

In effect, when printing a borderless image, you need to allow for the outer perimeter to be cropped out of the final print. The area that is designated as possibly being cropped out is referred to as the “bleed area”, where the image bleeds out into the area of the print that will be cut out. The standard bleed area for borderless printing is 1/8th of an inch (0.125 inches). However, the bleed area can vary for different types of printing and different media types.

In addition to the image getting cropped based on the bleed area for a borderless print, there is also the potential for an image needing to be cropped based on the aspect ratio of the output. For example, a common print size is 8″x10″, but most digital cameras have a sensor with an aspect ratio that would result in an 8″x12″ print rather than an 8″x10″ print, requiring that two inches be cropped from the longer side to match the aspect ratio of the print.

Risk of Gray Market Cameras

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Today’s Question: I ordered the Canon Rebel T7. What arrived today was the Canon 2000D. Is the Canon 2000D the same camera as the T7? I assume it is, because online and elsewhere it’s referred to the Cannon 2000D/Rebel T7.

Tim’s Quick Answer: This appears to be an example of a “gray market” product, meaning a product intended for an international market being sold in the US. In many cases gray market products are not covered under the manufacturer’s warranty, among other potential limitations.

More Detail: It will probably come as no surprise that there are two sides to the issue of gray market products. While there are certain risks or limitations involved with purchasing gray market products, many photographers actually seek out gray market cameras to get the advantage of a lower price.

In the case of the specific example from today’s question, the Canon EOS 2000D is the European version of what is the Canon EOS Rebel T7 (https://bhpho.to/4gK2opX) in the Americas. These cameras have the same basic features, but there are some localized differences, such as chargers for different power outlets for their respective regions.

If you purchase the 2000D in the US, it means it was not sold by an authorized reseller. In other words, in effect you’re buying a used camera (even if the box was never opened) from a private individual (even if a company is selling you the product). Of course, if you had purchased a 2000D in Europe, you could obviously travel to the US and have a perfectly good camera. So the overall business issue here is that the authorized reseller is being bypassed.

For the consumer, as long as the product is legitimate and hasn’t been modified (such as by adapting the battery charger from a European to a US outlet type) there isn’t any inherent problem with buying a gray market product. And in most cases you’ll find that gray market products are less expensive than the markets intended for your market. For this reason, many photographers seek out gray market products to save money on their gear. In this situation you just need to make sure you’re buying from a reputable seller and that the product is legitimate.

However, you may not be able to get warranty coverage, technical support, or rebates if you buy a gray market product. Canon, for example, calls out that they won’t provide these benefits to those who purchase gray market products, as outlined on their website here:

https://www.usa.canon.com/support/gray-market

Many photographers purchase gray market products on a regular basis and are very happy with their purchases. I’ve even heard from photographers who were able to get warranty coverage (even from Canon) for gray market products. However, if you’re going to purchase a gray market product, you should be aware that there are some risks. And if you unknowingly purchased a gray market product, you may want to consider returning it for a refund or contacting the manufacturer to see if they’ll be able to cover the warranty and provide technical support.

Backup Photos Included in Catalog

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Today’s Question: For some reason the backup drive of my external drive where I keep all my photos is included in my Lightroom Catalog, so I have duplicates of pretty much all images in the catalog. It seems to me that this is unnecessary and doubles the size of my catalog. Should I just remove the backup drive from the Lightroom Classic catalog and if so, what is the best way to do it?

Tim’s Quick Answer: I do not recommend keeping backup copies of photos in the Lightroom Classic catalog. As long as you’re sure that you’ve only been working with the primary photos (not the backup copies) within Lightroom Classic, you can remove all the backup images in one step by removing the top-level folder.

More Detail: Having backup copies of your photos in the Lightroom Classic catalog is unnecessary and can potentially be quite problematic. For example, there is the risk of confusion with the duplication of images, which might sometimes result in you updating the primary images, while at other times updating the backup images, so that all your updates are not in one place for a given image.

I do recommend first reviewing the backup images to make sure you haven’t been updating them. For example, you could select all of them and then use the Library Filter bar to check various metadata fields to ensure there hadn’t been any updates in your workflow, such as to confirm that none of those images have star ratings or keywords assigned to them.

Once you’re confident that you’ve only been working with the primary images, the backup copies can be removed from the catalog, without deleting them from the hard drive so you’ll still have your backup. Even when you’re feeling confident, however, I do recommend creating an updated backup of your catalog before proceeding.

To remove the duplicate photos, I recommend simply removing the top-level folder. In the Folders section of the left panel in the Library module, if you have a top-level folder for all the photos (such as a “Pictures” folder) you can right-click on that folder and choose “Remove” from the popup menu. If you don’t see a parent folder for the folders that contain your photos, right-click on one of the top-level folders and choose “Show Parent Folder” from the popup. You could repeat this all the way up to the root level of the hard drive if you need to in order to find the top-level location where the folders containing your photos is located. Then remove that top-level folder, which will remove all subfolders and all photos without deleting anything.

In this case you would of course only be removing folders and photos from the backup drive. All folders and photos (and metadata) from the primary hard drive would be unaffected. More importantly, once you perform this task you’ll have a more streamlined catalog in Lightroom Classic. I do recommend backup up your catalog both before and after doing this work, with the options to perform error-checking and optimization enabled for those backups.

Scanned Photos in PDF Format

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Today’s Question: I started to work on a family project and have scanned a large number of photos. Some of these are saved as PDF documents, but I now realize I need a different format like JPEG to work in Lightroom Classic or Photoshop. How do you recommend I convert the PDFs for the most efficient workflow?

Tim’s Quick Answer: You can easily convert the PDF documents to images in a few different ways. It is also possible to open PDF documents directly in Photoshop, including choosing which pages of the PDF you want to open as images so you can then save them in the desired format.

More Detail: While you wouldn’t normally save a photo as a PDF document, it is certainly possible to do so. For example, you can save an image as a PDF in Photoshop, and as indicated in today’s question, in many cases when scanning photo prints the default may be to save the resulting images as a PDF document. However, applications such as Lightroom Classic don’t support PDF documents, so you would need to convert the documents to images.

There are a number of ways you could go about doing this. If all the PDF documents consist of only one page, you can easily batch process a selection of PDF documents into images using Adobe Bridge. Start by selecting the documents in Bridge, then from the menu choose Tools > Photoshop > Image Processor. This will launch Photoshop and bring up the Image Processor dialog, with the documents from Bridge automatically selected for processing. You can then select the image format and other options and process the documents in batch. If the PDF documents consist of more than one page, however, only the first page will be converted to an image using this method.

Another option is to use the free online Adobe Acrobat PDF to image converter to process a PDF document (including those consisting of multiple pages) to individual images. You simply upload your PDF, choose the image format you want to convert to, and click the Convert button to process the PDF. You can then download the resulting images to your computer. This free converter can be found here:

https://www.adobe.com/acrobat/online/pdf-to-jpg.html

If you have access to Adobe Acrobat Pro (such as with an Adobe Creative Cloud subscription beyond the Photography Plan) you can export all pages of a PDF to images. Simply open the PDF in Acrobat Pro and from the menu choose File > Export To > Image and then choose the image format you want to use. You can then choose the location and filename to use, along with image settings applicable to the format you’ve selected and click the Save button to process all pages of the PDF document to individual images.

Any of these methods will enable you to convert the images that had been saved as PDF documents into an image format supported by other software such as Lightroom Classic.

Convert TIFF to DNG

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Today’s Question: After finishing an image in Photoshop I usually save it as a TIFF file, then flatten the layers, adjust the size (reduce the pixel count) and save it as a JPEG. Is there a way to save the finished image as a DNG instead of a TIFF file? If the answer is yes, is there a way of taking all my TIFF files and saving them as DNG files?

Tim’s Quick Answer: There are ways to convert TIFF files to Adobe DNG (Digital Negative) files, but there isn’t much of an advantage to doing so, and there could be a big disadvantage if you discard the TIFF images.

More Detail: Converting a TIFF (or other standard image type) to a DNG file won’t create a raw capture, even though DNG can be used as a raw capture format. In other words, you won’t be getting the advantages of a raw capture by using this workflow. In addition, the DNG file would not contain the layers you created for the TIFF image in Photoshop. Therefore, the only real benefit would be that the DNG file would have a smaller file size compared to the TIFF image.

I strongly recommend retaining the edited file with all layers as a master image to be used for the basis of all output for sharing the image later. In this context it wouldn’t make sense to convert the TIFF file to DNG.

If you did want to convert an image file to a DNG, this can be done very easily in Lightroom Classic or Lightroom using the Export feature. In both applications this command can be found on the menu at File > Export, and as part of the export process you can choose to export as a DNG image. This would enable you to batch export multiple images, by the way.

It is also possible to open a TIFF image in Camera Raw by opening the TIFF image via Adobe Bridge. However, Camera Raw only supports flattened TIFF images, so you would need to flatten the image to use this workflow, which again I don’t recommend. But if you did open a TIFF (or raw or JPEG) image in Camera Raw, you can click on the “more” button (the three dots) on the thumbnail for the image after enabling the filmstrip view. There you’ll find the Save Image > Save Image command (or presets for saved settings) where you can process the image into a DNG file.

Depth and Scope of Folder Structure

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Today’s Question: I saw an article offering a method for organizing files in four “foolproof” steps, which revolved around folders for each year and optional folders within, where you basically just dump all files into the applicable year folder. The article wasn’t focused on organizing photos, but I wondered if you thought there was any merit to this notion?

Tim’s Quick Answer: For organizing photos, it is absolutely possible to organize photos into a simple folder structure based only on years, especially if other metadata such as keywords is applied consistently. This is not, however, an approach I would recommend for general files beyond photos.

More Detail: Many readers already know that I do not organize most of my photos with a date-based folder structure. I find a location-based folder structure works the best for most photos, but I certainly appreciate that for many photographers a date-based structure makes sense.

Regardless of your approach for naming folders for organizing photos or other files, it is important to consider the depth of that folder structure. For example, if you create year-based folders do you need any subfolders within them? For photos I think it is reasonable to simply put all photos from a given year into a year-based folder, as long as you then use keywords or other metadata to enable you to find specific photos. But you may also want to create folders for months, or based on trips, or other criteria, within each year-based folder.

For general files that are not photos, however, I don’t think it makes sense to dump all files from a year into a year-based folder. Even if you use subfolders to categorize the files within the year-based folders, I don’t generally consider this to be the best approach. Rather, I generally find it most helpful to organize files categorically before possibly using subfolders to divide the files up based on dates.

One of the core things I recommend focusing on when defining a folder structure strategy is how you’re going to be thinking about the photo (or file) you’re looking for. For my photos, it is mostly location that is topical to me, and so I primarily use a location-based folder structure (with folders for each trip, for example). For my other files I use categories.

Both of these decisions are based on the fact that I’m not generally thinking of a date when I’m looking for something. If I’m looking for the user manual for an appliance I’m thinking about the appliance and not about what year I purchased the appliance. But again, the key is to think about what makes the most sense for your particular needs and your way of thinking when it comes to defining a folder structure strategy.

Feathering a Range Mask

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Today’s Question: Is there a way to feather selections in Lightroom Classic or Camera Raw when creating a selection by color range or luminance, similar to the feather control on masking in Photoshop?

Tim’s Quick Answer: Yes, you can feather masks in Lightroom Classic and Camera Raw with the Color Range and Luminance Range mask options, though there is more control with Luminance Range than there is with Color Range.

More Detail: Feathering is a way to blur the edge of a mask so you can introduce a transition between the areas of the image being affected versus not affected by a targeted adjustment. This can create an effect where the adjustment seamlessly blends into the rest of the image, so it isn’t obvious that an adjustment has been applied only to specific areas.

When you create a mask using the Luminance Range option in Lightroom Classic or Camera Raw you have feathering controls that enable you to blend the transition edge with considerable control that is very similar to what is possible in Photoshop. This is controlled using the sliders on the Luminance Range control. The rectangle within the linear gradient represents areas of the image (based on tonal value) that will be completely affected by the adjustment. The slider handles at either side of the rectangle are the feathering controls. The farther away from the rectangle those sliders are positioned, the more the mask is feathered. You can control that feathering independently for the shadow versus highlight side of the luminance range being affected by the targeted adjustment.

With the Color Range option, you don’t have as much control over the feathering, as there is only a Refine slider for this purpose. The Refine control operates similar to the Fuzziness slider for the Color Range command in Photoshop, in that increasing the value will expand the mask with some degree of feathering, but also by enlarging the mask to include similar color values within the image. This means there isn’t a true feathering control for the Color Range option, though Refine provides a somewhat similar result.

Retaining Metadata for Derivative Images

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Today’s Question: I’m getting ready to import a lot of older images into Lightroom Classic These aren’t high-resolution images, so I want to use Topaz’ product to up-size them. At some point, I’m going to want to add keywords as I love this aspect of Lightroom Classic to help me find images. If I import these original images and assign keywords and then up-size them, will the keywords carry over to the new, higher resolution images?

Tim’s Quick Answer: When you create a derivative copy of an image in Lightroom Classic, the new copy will inherit the metadata from the original. Therefore, if you keyword the images before editing them with a plug-in such as Gigapixel by Topaz Labs (https://topazlabs.com/ref/273/) the image created in that process will include the keywords you had applied to the original image.

More Detail: When you create a derivative image in Lightroom Classic using either the Photo > Edit In or File > Export with Preset commands, the new derivative image will inherit the standard metadata from the original image. Therefore, if you assign keywords to an original image and then create a derivative copy, the keywords from the original will be included in the metadata for the derivative copy, for example.

It is important to keep in mind, however, that once you create a derivative image that inherits the metadata from the original, from that point forward the two images will be separate. That means that any updates you apply to metadata for one image after the derivative is created will not apply to the other image.

I therefore recommend applying all applicable keywords and metadata updates to the original image before creating a derivative copy, so that the original and the derivative will have as much metadata in common as possible. If you want to apply metadata updates to one of the images later in your workflow, you might want to synchronize those updates to keep the metadata as close to a perfect match between the two (or more) images as possible.

Avoiding Metadata Mismatches

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Today’s Question: While I use Lightroom Classic to manage my photos, sometimes I find it easier to just browse in Bridge. Since the Keywords field is a standard metadata field, is there any reason I can’t just update keywords in Bridge and have them update in Lightroom Classic?

Tim’s Quick Answer: I don’t recommend updating any metadata outside of Lightroom Classic, as doing so will lead to potentially problematic metadata mismatches.

More Detail: Because Lightroom Classic uses a catalog while software such as Adobe Bridge is a simple browser, it can be problematic to make updates to your photos outside of Lightroom Classic.

When you update metadata in Lightroom Classic those updates are saved in the catalog, and if you have enabled the option to save metadata to the source files they the metadata will also be updated in the file on your hard drive. When you update metadata for photos in Adobe Bridge, the updates are saved directly to the source image, but of course this will not cause the Lightroom Classic catalog to be updated.

So, if you’ve enabled the option to automatically save changes to the source file (via the “Automatically write changes into XMP” checkbox on the Metadata tab of the Catalog Settings dialog) your updates can be seen outside of Lightroom Classic. However, updates from outside Lightroom Classic can’t be seen in your catalog.

It is possible to synchronize the metadata to resolve this issue. For example, you could add keywords in Bridge, then go to Lightroom Classic and resolve the metadata mismatch by importing the updated metadata from the source files. However, I don’t recommend this approach because there is a risk of getting out of sync. For example, if you add keywords in Adobe Bridge, then add keywords in Lightroom Classic, and then resolve the metadata mismatch by importing the metadata from the source file, you will have lost the keywords you added in Lightroom Classic after the update in Bridge.

My recommendation is to always apply metadata updates in Lightroom Classic if you’re using Lightroom Classic to manage your photos. It is perfectly fine to browse your photos using other software, but I strongly recommend making any updates in that other software to avoid problems in Lightroom Classic.

Selection Brush versus Quick Selection Tool

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Today’s Question: I’ve been trying to understand the Selection Brush tool compared to the Quick Selection tool in Photoshop. They seem similar, in that they can be used to paint a selection shape. Do I need to know how to use both tools?

Tim’s Quick Answer: While the Selection Brush and Quick Selection tools in Photoshop are quite similar in many respects, there are two key differences that can make it beneficial to understand both tools and use them in different situations.

More Detail: The Quick Selection tool is a little more automated, in that when you paint with the Quick Selection tool Photoshop will attempt to find the edges of the object you’re painting over. So, you can paint over a sampling of the area or object in the image you want to select, and the tool will attempt to select the appropriate area automatically. With the Quick Selection tool, you’ll see your selection appear as the animated dashed line often referred to as the “marching ants” display.

The Selection tool operates more like a simple brush tool, allowing you to paint to define areas that you want to select versus not select. In this way it is somewhat similar to the Lasso tool, in that you can draw a closed shape and the area you draw around will be entirely included in the selection.

While you’re working with the Selection Brush your selection will appear as a colored overlay (you can adjust the settings for the overlay by clicking the gear icon on the Options bar). This behavior reveals that the Selection Brush tool is really something of a “shortcut” for a selection option that has been available for a long time: the Quick Mask mode that can be used in conjunction with the normal Brush tool to create or modify selections.

The Selection Brush and Quick Selection tools are somewhat similar, so you could certainly restrict yourself to using only one or the other. However, these tools are also different enough that you can absolutely put both to use in different situations. I find the Quick Selection tool very helpful for creating initial selections when you want to select an object or area that stands out reasonably well against the background. I find the Selection Brush tool helpful for situations where you need to refine the edge of a selection, and painting along that edge is easier or more comfortable compared to tracing along the edge as you would with a tool like the Lasso tool.

There are more than a few tools and commands for creating and refining selections in Photoshop. While there are some I use much more than others (and some that I rarely use), all of them tend to be useful in particular situations, and so it can be helpful to be familiar with all of them.