One interesting option is the "Raster Size > Mode". You can either use "Scale", like I did above, or you can make the rasters a custom size in pixels. I recommend trying a few different values for "Pixels per Point:", converting to JPEG, and seeing how the result looks. The bigger your "Pixels per Point" value, the larger your image will be.
PS. If you instead want to read JPEG images out of a PDF, rather than rendering the entire page, you want the "Spatial > Read Images" mode. I can tell you more about that mode if that is indeed what you're looking for.
I have another problem :-(. I have a PDF files which consist of few pages (2-3). When I run the translation as recommended from you, the results are 2-3 sepatated files. I need to have them as an JPEG but as 1 file. I have no page numbers to set an attribute pdf_page_number. And what the worst is, I have a houndreds of this files. Some of them have only 1 page but some a few pages. So I need something what will also recognize what has more than 1 page. Do you have any idea how to join in together?
I have a similar problem. I am converting pdfs to tiffs and am getting both color changes and rotation changes. I was hoping this non-spatial option would solve things but nothing comes out of the reader.
I have also tried the suggestions in the previous answer with the RasterInterpretationCoercer but when I do that, the only change is that the image in the inspector changes to the same incorrect color (bluish) as the output. If I output to a jpeg, the color is wrong but the orientation is ok.
Hi @justinv, I think it might be a good idea to post your issue as a new question. This thread is quite long already, so your new comment might not get noticed as easily. It would also help to add your sample data, workspace and log file to give some more background, so the community can provide suggestions based on your specific problem. Thank you!
So... I am a bit of an amateur and have been shooting all of pictures in jpeg format. I use Lightroom 4 and Photoshop Cs6 for editing them. I am finally making the switch to raw format. I would like all of my pictures to be in raw or dng to work better with lightroom, so here is my question. Is it possible to convert jpeg fies to raw or dng? Would it be a stupid idea to batch convert all of my jpegs into raw format? Is it even possible? I am kind of a new to this subject, so help me out.
You can't create raw format. But in Bridge you can have the option to edit jpeg format pictures in camera raw. If set up just right click on jpeg and choose "open in camera raw". Option is in edit/camera raw preferences.
I found out you can convert jpeg to DNG. Would it be smart or worth it to mass convert all of my pictures even if I don't get the same raw capabilities? I would do it mainly for further non-destructive editing and to match the new raw files I will start using. Is it worth it?
Keep in mind that because jpg is a lossy format, what ever data was disgarded, thats gone. As for converting to another format, thats actually a good idea, in that no more loss will occur(speaking of only file I/O data only), until you save as jpg again. Therefore, what format you choose, is dependant on where you want to edit the image. dng, tiff are good canidates for camera raw dialog box or lightroom. Psd, png, tiff, tga and probably a few more are good candidates for photoshop.
If you have the drive space, its a good idea to archive the jpgs once the conversion is done, more of a procaution than anything. I crinch a bit when I hear of files being deleted, no telling when they may be handy.
If you open your original photo from a DNG, even though it may have a JPEG inside it, there's less chance you might accidentally just hit File - Save and write over it, because you can't File - Save into a DNG from within Photoshop proper.
Method 2: I think this may be relatively new, well it is to me! Use the Export Panel in Bridge I drag my images onto a previously created preset which is set up to export as JPEG with options set as in Method 1. There is no option here to convert the colour profile to sRGB IEC61966-2.1 but that seems to happen by default using this method. I like this method as it does not involve opening Photoshop.
When you say "Works correctly here" do you mean, by the two methods I have described, you always obtain the same file extension whether it be .jpg or .jpeg? I don't see that consistency on my system.
"Workflow colour profiles are determined in ACR preferences" - yes, my workflow options have colour space set to ProPhoto RGB 16 Bit. When using the Photoshop Image Processor, under Section 3 File Type, Save as JPEG, one has the choice of whether to Convert Profile to sRGB via a checkbox. By contrast, when using the Bridge Export Panel to export as JPEG, there is no profile conversion offered, the profile is converted to sRGB whether one wants that or not.
Image Processor Pro is no longer being developed by Russell Brown, its now on Github.
As for file extensions, there isn't a way around that. You would need to batch rename after your export.
ERROR 000446: Output file format with specified pixel type or number of bands or colormap is not supported. Refer to the 'Technical specifications for raster dataset formats' help section in Desktop Help.
Anyways, I loaded it as a layer, and just exported the map as a .jpeg, 3000 dpi works size wise. Our problem is that the corners of the image have a known location, and the export is adding a margin to the image. Trying to remove the margins is affecting the aspect ratio, or cutting out parts of the image.
Not really GIS related but I have used Irfanview in the past for dealing with image conversions. It seems to work greatly. Check it out: IrfanView - Official Homepage - one of the most popular viewers worldwide
It may be trying to write a 4-band jpeg, which isn't supported according to the raster file formats document (1 or 3-band only). You can drop the 4th band by running Make Raster Layer, then try Copy Raster again.
we can use move file activity where in the source path mention the file path of JPEG image file which would be in .jpeg extension
and in destination path mention the file path with the file name and extension with .png
-file
Cheers
Now, I want to list several products on EBay. However, when I want to "List" the item, it will NOT proceed because it says the photo format has to be one of several formats such as: jpeg, png, gif, tiff, etc.
I'm attempting to clear hard drive space and realized I have 2,000+ photos in RAW format in my iPhoto library. Is there a way that I can convert all of these to JPEGs within iPhoto 9 and delete the RAW files without having to reorganize them back into events and such? I've changed the way I manage my photos these days - these are all quite old so I don't mind losing the RAW. Plus I have them backed up on my Time Machine.
And if you think that haveing them backedup on Time Machine is an archive you are in for a nasty surprise - Time Machine is a backup system which keeps a limited amount of historical data (amount is detern=mined by available disk space) and then delete the oldest data - it is not an archive system
Moving the iPhoto library is safe and simple - quit iPhoto and drag the iPhoto library intact as a single entity to the external drive - depress the option key and launch iPhoto using the "select library" option to point to the new location on the external drive - fully test it and then trash the old library on the internal drive (test one more time prior to emptying the trash)
To this issue, we can consider to use an image convert to render and convert raw files into jpeg image. And you said that you got 2,000+ photos in RAW format in my iPhoto library that need to be converted into jpeg image. For solving this problem, we can try a bath image converting application from a google searching.
If you're really set on getting rid of the RAW files, then I would select an event with the files, Export as JPEG, and then reimport the files. The probelm is that you'll lose your Faces, Places, Keywords, and Ratings.
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