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robertf3587731
Participant
January 14, 2019
Question

Open in Camera Raw - Non Destructive Edit?

  • January 14, 2019
  • 3 replies
  • 2149 views

I opened a JPEG image from Bridge into Camera Raw, edited, and saved the edits.  Back in bridge, I now have the edited version, but the original has disappeared.  In reading the guide to camera raw, it states that using camera raw as a filter allows for non-destructive edits.  I'm guessing that opening an image directly into camera raw from Bridge does not ensure non-destructive editing, the way that using it as a filter within Photoshop would.

Is this assumption correct?  Is there any way to recover the original image?  Thanks

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    3 replies

    Stephen Marsh
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    January 14, 2019

    Is there any way to recover the original image?

    Yes, you have to clear the CRS “Develop Settings” metadata – a few methods include:

    Using Adobe Bridge to remove the CRS metadata:

    Using Adobe Camera Raw to zero out the CRS metadata (visually the same, but not the same as removing the metadata):

    Using ExifTool to remove the CRS metadata:

    exiftool -XMP-crs:all= path/to/file.jpg

    Using a custom Adobe Bridge script:

    Re: Clear CRS Metadata

    robertf3587731
    Participant
    January 15, 2019

    Thank You All,

    I see that the original image can still be seen when I look directly into the folder on my hard drive.  It's not visible in Bridge.  I will look forward to learning how to clear the CRS metadata to keep it available in Bridge, and then follow the workflow you've described in the future.

    On Sunday, January 13, 2019, 10:58:31 PM PST, Stephen_A_Marsh <forums_noreply@adobe.com> wrote:

    Open in Camera Raw - Non Destructive Edit?

    created by Stephen_A_Marsh in Photoshop - View the full discussion

    <quote>Is there any way to recover the original image?</quote>

     

    Yes, you have to clear the CRS metadat, I’ll post in more detail when I am back on a computer (I hate using the phone for forum replies).

    If the reply above answers your question, please take a moment to mark this answer as correct by visiting: https://forums.adobe.com/message/10867119#10867119 and clicking ‘Correct’ below the answer

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    Stephen Marsh
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    January 15, 2019

    Robert, try resetting your Bridge preferences… If the file is not visible in Bridge it is going to be hard to clear the CRS develop settings metadata using standard Bridge based methods.

    You could try going into Photoshop, then using the open command and navigating to the file, opening into ACR and then creating and applying a “zeroed out” preset.

    Otherwise possibly Photoshop scripting or ExifTool would be the only option that I can think of right now, as files are input at the OS level outside of Bridge.

    D Fosse
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    January 14, 2019

    A jpeg opened into ACR has all edits stored as metadata instructions. So yes, it's non-destructive as long as you just click "Done" and don't save out a new copy.

    Those edits aren't visible outside ACR/Bridge, so sooner or later you have to make a new copy to bake it into the pixel data. But the advantage is that you only do it once, thus avoiding cumulative damage.

    Chuck Uebele
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    January 14, 2019

    The camera raw filter is different than opening a file in camera raw, as you did. Both are non destructive. You original jpg is still there with the edits, which can either be changed or deleted.

    In Bridge, you can right click o. The file, and select to reset development settings to return to the original file. You can also delete the XML file that has the same name, but will have to do that through your OS. You can also reset it in Camera Raw.