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Members News Monthly Image Competition April 2012 |
Bridge acts like a super file browser and at the basic level it has the functionality of Windows Explorer. In Explorer you may look at (some) thumbnails, move, copy, arrange or delete files. In Bridge you can 'see' more files (most graphics files have thumbnails visible to Bridge) and you may also open files, delete, move or copy them. In addition you have a larger (and variable-scale) preview and thumbnails, along with an ability to scroll through multi-page pdf files. You may also classify, grade, arrange and filter files in Bridge.

Most of this may also be done in Lightroom and Aperture, but these programs have to be purchased separately and also learned. If your work involves graphic design then you are almost certainly better using Bridge as you often need to 'see' many different types of file format.

The Interface
The interfacfor Bridge is indefinitely flexible but there are four
defaults: Essentials, Film Strip, Meta Data and Output. Additionally
there is a drop-down menu which lists the defaults, but adds Keywords,
Previews, Light Table and Folder Options. You may arrange the interface
to your liking and then save the arrangement as your own workspace (or
spaces). It then appears in the drop-down and takes the default shortcut
of Ctrl F1. The sub-panes (eg Keywords, Collections or Favourites) may
be switched in via the menu bar dropdown.
The background grey may be varied from black through to white in the
Edit>Preferences>general pane.
Favourites
This pane is very useful and should be organised and maintained. Drag
(say) the current wedding or shoot into Favourites and, regardless of
how deeply buried the folder might be on your system, it is always only
one mouse-click away. When the wedding is completed remove the shortcut
from your Favourites pane and add in the latest one. If you are
operating across a number of folders (eg originals, finished, album
pages) then put all three in Favourites to make life easier.
File Handling
It seems that the change to digital is labouring most photographers with
a large number of files to process into their systems. One of the
claimed advantages of Aperture and Lightroom is the speed with which
grading and adjustments may be made and this is certainly true. However,
there are many facilities within Bridge that are underemployed, often
through lack of knowledge and, to some extent, this is the purpose of
this feature – be warned though, it is a rather dry subject, which
delivers its benefits only in the future as your image bank expands!

The Photo Downloader
This facility is confusingly named in the primary menu bar as 'Get
photos from Camera'. It is confusing because it actually takes images
from the camera CompactFlash card and this is better accomplished using
a dedicated card reader. The miniature connectors on a camera and a
reliance on the camera battery power mean that using the camera as a
sort of external hard drive is not recommended! In any case, good
practice at things such as weddings is to spread the day over a number
of cards and so you will invariably have more than one card to download.

There are two panes for the Downloader, the
second of which is billed as Advanced. Within either you may download
your image files, back them up to a second drive, rename them and,
should you choose, clear your CompactFlash card of images after
download. The system remembers the download file folder addresses but
not the custom file name, this you have to type for each successive
card. This is a pain but the pain may be alleviated by copying the
custom name to the clipboard and pasting it (Ctrl C to copy; Ctrl V to
paste) each time. This is actually quite important as, if you name your
files with the name of the client and it's Micha Wojciechowski, you are
going to have a job on your hands. Making a spelling error will cause
false file sorting at later stages!
The Advanced Downloader also allows you to tag files for copying which
can be useful if more than one job is on a card and they need to be
routed to different folders and archives.
Analysis
The Filter tab opens a number of data fields which, in turn, enable you
to perform analysis of a folder of files. Suppose you harbour a
suspicion that one of your lenses is a little soft. Using the filter
(see screen grab) you can select just the images from that lens and
review them critically. You may of course use any of the other criteria
in the meta data.
Read more articles on Adobe Photoshop
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