![]() ![]() This process is very quick and depending on the size of your images may not be noticeable, if you do see your images show up on screen, pay attention to the process as there is no alert to inform you that it is finished, it just stops processing. (If you look at the image above and the Date Modified column you will notice that all these images were processed in under a minute)Īs the Image Processor is part of Adobe Photoshop you will notice that once you press ‘Run’ the images will open up in Photoshop and be resized, resaved and closed. This process took very little time as the images were already quite small in file size/resolution and there were only 6 to process. ![]() Once the process has completed your images will be either in the original source folder or in a folder chosen/created by you. The resizing option is great for applying an image size reduction to multiple images at once especially when you may not need your images at a precise size (eg 1000 x 150 px)ĭepending on how many images you chose in the first step (and how large the images are in resolution) will decide how long the process takes. This will mean that a portrait image will be no higher than 1024 px and a landscape image will be no wider than 1024 px. The other option that the File Type section allows for is resizing your images, this is personally what I find to be the best feature of this tool.īy clicking the ‘ Resize to Fit’ option I am telling it to resize the images it is processing to be no bigger in width or height than 1024 px TIFF – is great for retaining optimal resolution and image quality for uses such as printing and archivingįor this tutorial I will be using JPEG as the images will be processed for use on the Web and/or in Powerpoint™ PSD – is the Adobe Photoshop native format and is essential for retaining Adobe Photoshop layers and functionality, it is also The batch process can take from a few seconds to several minutes or more, depending on how many. JPEG – is the best choice for any Web, Computer Display, Video and Mobile uses Hit the Run button and Bridge and Photoshop will do the rest. The File Type option of the Image Processor dialog has three sections that you can control which relate to the 3 File Types that you can process your images to. ![]()
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