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I'm using the latest Photoshop 2015 version with Windows 10.
I’m getting better at making jpgs from RAW files, but am not always 100% satisfied with the results, so I always save the RAW files that I can go back to at a later date when my Photoshop skills have gotten better. I of course, save the associated XMP files so I can see what edits I made with Adobe Camera Raw, however, once I start making changes to the NRW in Photoshop after I hit “open” within Adobe Camera RAW, unless I manually keep a spreadsheet or some other document of the changes I make, I’ll later have no idea what I did.
For example, I may select the subject and then increase the brightness by 31%, the contrast by 62%, and then increase the saturation by 12%, then select the inverse and decrease the brightness by 24% before saving the jpg. So, if I later want to see if I can make a better jpg from the file, I’d like to have the changes logged somewhere that I can use as a reference. I’m well aware that I can save the PSD file so I can start where I had off, but this is not what I’m looking for. I just tried an exercise like the above and opened the history panel. It had a section for brightness/contrast, but didn’t bother to show how much I changed the brightness and contrast, and was there any way to export the history.
It would be a major pain to have to take the time to manually document all the Photoshop steps I take, and a screen recorder isn’t a practical solution. I can’t be the only person who wants this logging. Is there any way to accomplish this natively from within Photoshop, or perhaps with some third-party utility? To be clear, I want to export the detailed steps to an easy to read file.
There are two separate "pipelines" here.
1) Camera Raw Settings are stored in the XMP file and are often included as metadata for historical reference in files processed into a rendered file. This isn't history as such, it will not show you that on Monday you adjusted exposure to -0.5 and then on Tuesday changed it to +0.75 etc. It will just indicate the last value.
2) Edits in Photoshop can be logged to text file, look in preferences/settings for History Logging.
Hope this helps.
Edit:
...In Photoshop, navigate to Preferences > History & Content Credentials. Check the History Log and select Text File, then choose a location to save the text file. Finally, select Detailed from the Edit Log Items drop-down list. This will log all your actions, including adjustments like 12 saturation or 62 contrast...
We have a winner! Tested and working!
Many thanks and happy holidays!!
Which was exactly what I suggested earlier... Just saying :]
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The system isn't allowing me to edit the OP, but I obviously had inteended on writing that I'm using Photoshop 2025, not 2015.
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There are two separate "pipelines" here.
1) Camera Raw Settings are stored in the XMP file and are often included as metadata for historical reference in files processed into a rendered file. This isn't history as such, it will not show you that on Monday you adjusted exposure to -0.5 and then on Tuesday changed it to +0.75 etc. It will just indicate the last value.
2) Edits in Photoshop can be logged to text file, look in preferences/settings for History Logging.
Hope this helps.
Edit: Recording an action, then it can be saved as a text file is another option to consider.
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Hi Mark,
Photoshop doesn’t have a built-in way to export detailed step logs. The History Panel tracks actions but doesn’t show specific values or let you export.
You could look into Photoshop scripting or third-party plugins for workflow tracking, but there’s no native solution for this.
As a workaround, consider jotting down key changes in a text file or using Smart Objects for non-destructive edits.
Hope this helps!
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In Photoshop, navigate to Preferences > History & Content Credentials. Check the History Log and select Text File, then choose a location to save the text file. Finally, select Detailed from the Edit Log Items drop-down list. This will log all your actions, including adjustments like 12 saturation or 62 contrast...
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We have a winner! Tested and working!
Many thanks and happy holidays!!
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Which was exactly what I suggested earlier... Just saying :]
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You do indeed also deserve credit and thanks. The other responder's answer got more attention from me, as he included a screenshot of the setting. I also marked your initial reply as "Correct Answer."
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Thanks for clarifying, I replied from my phone, so I couldn't add screenshots and was going from memory.
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