![]() This turns out to be a handier trick than it first appears. Whatever your default settings for Camera Raw may be, these are also used by Adobe Bridge when thumbnail previews are being displayed. So, if the default Auto-On is the way things are, every thumbnail in Bridge will be as good as the auto function can make it.Īgain, for some users that may be a good thing. But for others, me included, this is not a good thing. The reason why is that shots taken with different exposures are all made to look almost alike. Even shots a couple of stops over or under exposed look much like a properly exposed one. This makes selecting the best one problematic, but can also be very confusing when one has deliberately bracketed exposures for effect. The gottchais that Save New Camera Raw Defaultsonly applies to the camera model that was being used when this menu item was selected. So, if you shoot with a Canon 5D and a 1DsMKII, for example, and you turned each of the Auto check boxes off, and saved that configuration as your default while a 5D file was displayed, it only applies to 5D files. ![]() ![]() Your 1Ds MKII files will still be displayed as thumbnails within Bridge with the Auto settings active, and when loaded into Camera Raw will appear that way as well. ![]() ![]() The solution? Simple, Just turn them off (CMD/CTRL-U) and then Save New Camera Raw Defaultsagain, followed by Done. #Disable adobe bridge photo downloader iso#ĭo the same thing for any other cameras that you may want to load raw files from. ![]()
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