You’re usually prompted to Save Image to the same folder the file is from, if not, navigate to that folder and export there. Any of them are fine, although I prefer TIFF. DNG (Photoshop), JPEG, JPEG 2000, PNG, or TIFF. When you export from Iridient Developer (or Process Image and Save As) you’re giving a few options. If the icon isn’t there, then open Iridient first and it should appear.Įxporting From Iridient Back To Lightroom It’s as easy as selecting one or as many photos as you like in Lightroom and dragging and dropping them onto your Iridient Developer Icon on your Dock. Or you’re shooting exclusively RAW, you can always send files to Iridient Developer Manually. If the plugin technique isn’t working for you. Send Files To Iridient Developer Manually – For RAW ![]() This will not really give you any huge advantage to image detail or X-Trans image RAW converting since you’re using JPEG, but it will allow you to use Iridients other great features like their sharpening and noise reduction tools which I love. Now you will go about editing your photo in Iridient like you normally do. If you shot JPEG, then you should Edit a Copy so you always have a backup of your original JPEG. You’ll be prompted with a few options that look like this.ĮDIT: Unfortunately this only works for JPEG or TIFF files. I usually set mine like this.įrom there once you’re files are in Lightroom, all you’ll need to do is right click each image or group and select Edit In -> Iridient There are a few options you can choose as well. Navigate to Iridient Developer in your Applications folder and you should be good to go. To set up Iridient Developer as a plugin, all you need to do is go into Lightroom Preferences, find the External Editing Tab, and choose a new Additional External Editor. Setting Up Iridient As A Plugin – For JPEG There are a few ways of doing this, but really only one that you need to know. I’ll cover later how to get files back into Lightroom. Both are good to know, and I personally use the two interchangeably. One is to set it up as an external editor (or plugin), the other is to send files to Iridient Developer manually. There are really only two good ways to use Iridient with Lightroom. The other method is using Iridient Developer Only and manually organizing your photos and exports. There are two ways of using Iridient that I’ll cover, one is using Lightroom first to build and organize all your photo catalogs, then use Iridient as a plugin that you send files to and from. ![]() In this guide I want to share with you the way I use Iridient Developer to process my Fujifilm RAW files and a file structure to help you stay organized. If you’re a Fujifilm shooter and want to use Iridient Developer as your primary photo processing software, or even if you want to use it as a RAW converter, then have a solid and consistent workflow is not only going to save you a lot of time, but it will also make your photo editing process a lot simpler. ![]() Do you ever wonder if you’re using the most time efficient workflow?
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