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alexandert96016557
Participant
January 23, 2024
질문

RAW Bilder in JPG umwandeln

  • January 23, 2024
  • 2 답변들
  • 870 조회

Ich verwende für meine Fotos noch die letzte Nicht-Cloud-Version von Lightroom (6.14). Meine Kamera habe ich so eingestellt, dass sie Rawdaten (CR2, weil Canon) und JPG-Dateien speichert. Wenn ich eine Fotosession geschossen habe, kommen alle Bilddaten (CR2 und JPG) in mein Lightroom-Verzeichnis auf einem NAS und werden in meinen Lightroom-Katalog eingeladen.

 

Jetzt müsste ich so langsam mal ein wenig Speicher freischaufeln. Und nicht alle Fotos gleichen einem professionellem Fotoshooting. Ein großer Teil sind Alltagsshots bei denen die Raw-Daten nicht nötig sind.

 

Da stellt sich mir die Frage, ob ich in Lightroom ein Verzeichnis auswählen und LR sagen, es soll bei allen Bilder eines ausgewählten Verzeichnisses die JPG behalten und die Raw-Dateien löschen? Natürlich möchte ich dabei die Bearbeitungshistorie behalten. Also wäre die Exportfunktion dafür ungeeignet.

 

Vielen Dank schon einmal für Eure Antworten.

Viele Grüße,

Alexander

이 주제는 답변이 닫혔습니다.

2 답변

Rob_Cullen
Community Expert
Community Expert
January 25, 2024

Shoot only RAW in camera, and you won't have this dilemna.

 

Regards. My System: Windows-11, Lightroom-Classic 15.1.1, Photoshop 27.3.1, ACR 18.1.1, Lightroom 9.0, Lr-iOS 10.4.0, Bridge 16.0.2 .
alexandert96016557
Participant
January 25, 2024

That won't be the solution either. Just deleting the jpg files would be the same like shooting only raw files and it won't be a problem for lightroom.

But the raw files are 5-times as big as the jpg files.

Rob_Cullen
Community Expert
Community Expert
January 25, 2024

Discarding the best advice to keep raw image files, One workflow would be-

1) Shoot only in RAW

2) In Lr select images you consider as "snapshots"

3) Export selected images to JPG (Add to catalog)

4) Delete the selected RAWs.

 

Regards. My System: Windows-11, Lightroom-Classic 15.1.1, Photoshop 27.3.1, ACR 18.1.1, Lightroom 9.0, Lr-iOS 10.4.0, Bridge 16.0.2 .
dj_paige
Legend
January 23, 2024

Deleting the RAW photos is rarely a good idea. Deleting the JPGs is a much better idea. You can always go back and re-create the JPG from the RAW, but not the other way around. In other words, keep the high quality images (RAW), not the low quality images (JPG).

 

On the other hand, if you are culling the "bad" (or not so good) photos with the idea to delete them, so as to save space, delete both the RAW and the JPG.

alexandert96016557
Participant
January 24, 2024

Hello DJ Paige,

 

Thanks for your answer. But your joke post is not the solution of my problem.

I want to devide my photos in "Photo shooting" and "Snapshot". For the snapshots the jpg files are good enough. And for the photo shootings I want to keep the high quality images.

 

So, do you know if something similar to want I was thinking about is possible?

alexandert96016557
Participant
January 24, 2024

In measurement technology, we say "as good as necessary and as bad as possible". 🙂