
- #On1 photo raw develop advance to next photo update
- #On1 photo raw develop advance to next photo full
Is this process faster than doing the same thing but if you use Lr, use the ADD option rather than the COPY on import? In my case using On1, I’d still have to make a copy of the folder to a second folder (I like redundancy for safety purposes). From what i can see with ON1 Photo 10, for the speed you need to first create a folder for your photos then copy them from your media card to the folder on your HD, then access them from On1. Once in Lr, I’d cull the photos and make my picks, star rating, color rating and rejects, then filter for the rejects and clear them off of my hard drive. Scott, The thing that I liked about Lr import process was that I could copy photos from an SD or CF card, create a folder in my Photos folder and import those photos not only to the target folder but to a back up folder in a different location.
#On1 photo raw develop advance to next photo update
You can also update metadata for multiple photos at a time.
#On1 photo raw develop advance to next photo full
Renaming is not as full featured as Aperture or Lightroom and there's no mechanism to save a preset for a file naming scheme. You're presented with a popup and you can construct a custom file name using one or more text fields. To rename a set of files, select them all, right-click on the selection and choose Rename Files. Those are doable in Browse, but as separate operations. However, you can't rename files and assign metadata as part of the copy. You can certainly copy files from a memory card to another folder on your hard drive from within Browse. Once I have visited each photo in a folder and applied a rating for those I want to keep, I use the Filter in the left pane to display only images that have been rated.īrowse is exactly what it's name says - a browser. When you rate or color a photo in Browse, that same rating and color label is available in other photo management programs, such as Lightroom. Likes and Dislikes are propriety to Browse and will not appear in other programs. Star ratings and color labels are tracked using industry standards. If a photo is truly terrible, I tap the right arrow key and skip the photo altogether, leaving it unrated. If you rank photos using color labels, those are also supported in Browse and use similar keyboard shortcuts as Lightroom (6 though 9 and 0 for purple).

With Browse's Photo > Auto Advance setting enabled, once I rate a photo the next photo is automatically loaded.

Tapping a number key applies that star rating to a photo. I use a 5-star rating system so my left hand hovers over the 1 though 5 keys.
