Newbie select & save

L
Posted By
Lew
Jan 9, 2004
Views
227
Replies
3
Status
Closed
I’m sure that this is a no brainer, but I can’t find an easy way to do the following. I use traditional cameras and then scan my negatives, an entire roll at a time, into a large .tiff as a proof sheet. After I open this "proof sheet" in Photoshop, I’d like to select and save individual frames as jpegs to email to friends, etc…

-Lew

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N
nomail
Jan 9, 2004
Lew wrote:

I’m sure that this is a no brainer, but I can’t find an easy way to do the following. I use traditional cameras and then scan my negatives, an entire roll at a time, into a large .tiff as a proof sheet. After I open this "proof sheet" in Photoshop, I’d like to select and save individual frames as jpegs to email to friends, etc…

Copy, paste into new document (Photoshop will automatically come up with the correct size if you choose New Document), flatten, save.


Johan W. Elzenga johan<<at>>johanfoto.nl Editor / Photographer http://www.johanfoto.nl/
TT
Tom Thackrey
Jan 9, 2004
On 9-Jan-2004, "Lew" wrote:

I’m sure that this is a no brainer, but I can’t find an easy way to do the following. I use traditional cameras and then scan my negatives, an entire roll at a time, into a large .tiff as a proof sheet. After I open this "proof sheet" in Photoshop, I’d like to select and save individual frames as
jpegs to email to friends, etc…

Select the area you want to save as a jpeg.
Crop to the selection
Use "Save for the web" to save it as a jpeg
Undo (in the history palette) to before the selection
Repeat


Tom Thackrey
www.creative-light.com
tom (at) creative (dash) light (dot) com
do NOT send email to (it’s reserved for spammers)
H
HBW
Jan 9, 2004
Lew,
Use the square selection tool to highlight a frame. right click and copy this selection. go to File and select new, and thenm paste the selection into the new box. Photoshop will size the box exactly to the file you have copied. keep repeating this and you will have separated all of your pictures into their own files. Save them as Tiffs for later edit.

"Lew" wrote in message
I’m sure that this is a no brainer, but I can’t find an easy way to do the following. I use traditional cameras and then scan my negatives, an entire roll at a time, into a large .tiff as a proof sheet. After I open this "proof sheet" in Photoshop, I’d like to select and save individual frames
as
jpegs to email to friends, etc…

-Lew

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