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The Photoshop Camera Raw plug-in lets you open a
camera's raw digital image files so that
you can edit them in Photoshop or ImageReady. As you open the camera
raw image files, you can quickly apply adjustments such as exposure
compensation or tonal adjustments without compressing the image or
losing any of the original image data. The camera raw image file can
then be brought into Photoshop and saved in a final format such as PSD,
JPEG, Large Document Format (PSB), or TIFF. By default, Camera Raw
settings are stored on a per-image basis in a Camera Raw database
file. You can choose a preference to have the settings saved in
sidecar XMP files (files that accompany
the original camera raw image file in the same folder) instead of a
Camera Raw database. For more information about Camera Raw settings,
see
About Photoshop Camera Raw plug-in settings.
The Photoshop Camera Raw plug-in lets you open a
camera's raw digital image files so that
you can edit them in Photoshop or ImageReady. As you open the camera
raw image files, you can quickly apply adjustments such as exposure
compensation or tonal adjustments without compressing the image or
losing any of the original image data. The camera raw image file can
then be brought into Photoshop and saved in a final format such as PSD,
JPEG, Large Document Format (PSB), or TIFF. By default, Camera Raw
settings are stored on a per-image basis in a Camera Raw database
file. You can choose a preference to have the settings saved in
sidecar XMP files (files that accompany
the original camera raw image file in the same folder) instead of a
Camera Raw database. For more information about Camera Raw settings,
see
About Photoshop Camera Raw plug-in settings.
The Photoshop Camera Raw plug-in lets you open a
camera's raw digital image files so that
you can edit them in Photoshop or ImageReady. As you open the camera
raw image files, you can quickly apply adjustments such as exposure
compensation or tonal adjustments without compressing the image or
losing any of the original image data. The camera raw image file can
then be brought into Photoshop and saved in a final format such as PSD,
JPEG, Large Document Format (PSB), or TIFF. By default, Camera Raw
settings are stored on a per-image basis in a Camera Raw database
file. You can choose a preference to have the settings saved in
sidecar XMP files (files that accompany
the original camera raw image file in the same folder) instead of a
Camera Raw database. For more information about Camera Raw settings,
see
About Photoshop Camera Raw plug-in settings.
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