Quote:
Originally Posted by RedShoe
There is a way.
It's something I figured out a while back. Here's what you do. It SOUNDS more complex than it is, but once you set it up once, running watermarks is a breeze.
____________________________________
*** FIRST STEP ***
You open your watermark (I assume you're using a graphic watermark) open the watermark. Then create a new transparent document that's like 3000 x 3000 pixels. Just make it at least as big as your largest dimension. Then paste in your watermark and position it in the lower right hand corner (again I assume that's where you want it) Then add a new layer, and on this layer put a single 1x1 pixel white dot in the upper left hand corner and in the lower lower right hand corner. Set the opacity of that layer to like 25%
Merge the layers together.
Now you should have a graphic watermark in the lower right corner and two micro dots (working as registration points) in the corners, all on a single layer.
rotate your canvas 180 degrees, so the watermark is upside down in the upper left corner now.
Save this document as a PSD, it will now be used for all your watermarking.
Select>all, then Edit>copy. Now you're set to paste the watermark into the images automatically. Next you have to build the actual action.
*** SECOND STEP ***
Open a photo and set it up to record an action. Start recording. First step, rotate canvas 180 degrees, and then hit CTRL+V (to paste). Now you should have an upside down image and an upside down watermark in the appropriate area. Hit CTRL+E to merge the layers together, rotate 180 degrees and then do a Save As. Save the image, close the image, and then stop recording the action.
Done.
*** USE ***
Then to batch, just open your watermark, select all and copy, then run the batch process. It's easy.
_____________________________________
Like I said it kind of sounds complex, but really all your doing is creating a watermark on a larger canvas, and then building an action that will paste it in the proper place.
As for the browser loading slow.. I dunno. PhotoShop browser is not as fast as Microsoft image viewer so I use that to sort my images then run the batch out of photoshop.
|
well thanks for the trick - i'll try it out just cuz i want to see how it works on a set with both landscape and portraits. how somebody came up with that trick is beyond me.
BUT now I've found this free Fastone software - it does everything/anything you'd want for watermarking and fast and it loads the thumbnails into a file browser of its own and that is 10 times faster than it takes for Photoshop's File Browser. Also the jpeg compression looks good - better than Photoshop's at the same KB size per pic.
i did 50 photosets with the Fastone in a few hours - now i forget when i started - might have been 4 or so hours but in Photoshop it was taking me 15minutes per set. I had to remove 1 GB of bad RAM so that doesn't help running Photoshop.