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Hi,
I’m using the Image Processor in Photoshop CS2 to convert a bunch of tiff files in different locations on my network drive to jpegs. Ideally what I’d like to happen is for the new jpeg files to be in the same folders as their original tiff counterparts, and to be named identically except for the .jpg extension replacing the .tif.
What actually happens is that the new files are created in separate folders in each location and every file includes "copy" in the file name e.g. if the original is "Portrait 23.tif" in folder "John Smith", the new file is called "Portrait 23 copy.jpg" and is in "John Smith > JPEG".
Is there any way to override this default beaviour and tell Photoshop I don’t want the two features which are presumably there as safety devices to prevent inadvertent overwriting?
Thanks,
Giles.
I’m using the Image Processor in Photoshop CS2 to convert a bunch of tiff files in different locations on my network drive to jpegs. Ideally what I’d like to happen is for the new jpeg files to be in the same folders as their original tiff counterparts, and to be named identically except for the .jpg extension replacing the .tif.
What actually happens is that the new files are created in separate folders in each location and every file includes "copy" in the file name e.g. if the original is "Portrait 23.tif" in folder "John Smith", the new file is called "Portrait 23 copy.jpg" and is in "John Smith > JPEG".
Is there any way to override this default beaviour and tell Photoshop I don’t want the two features which are presumably there as safety devices to prevent inadvertent overwriting?
Thanks,
Giles.
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