


This is generally because white balance changes, sharpening changes, and a host of other little tweaks that vary as a result of settings, light, and more.īy the way, if you haven't a lot of Photoshop experience with photographs, I'd recommend Scott Kelby's " The Adobe Photoshop CS5 Book for Digital Photographers" as a good place to start (Google if the link doesn't work). I've only ever done it for proof images where I've totally controlled the light used in the shoot, but for anything else, including images I intend for display on the web or in print, the editing is done image by image. Personally, I would never do this for final images. You may want to experiment a little with a small set of images, but be aware that Raw conversion to JPEG is seldom, if ever really, a consistent change. From there you will be presented with a dialog that provides a number of options for batch processing including using the first image as the basis for further changes, file type to save as, etc. Select on the menu: "Tools -> Photoshop -> Image Processor".


You can make a setting change in the camera. If you prefer to download your photos in the JPG format. Nikon NEF files are what are commonly called RAW files. Help! Somehow during the process of trasferring pics from my D90 Nikon to the computer they transferred as NEF files, and now even when I move the files to another folder I can't seem to download from the camera, and I don't know how to convert the files
