Graphics Programs Reference
In-Depth Information
Step Three:
Now press G to return to the Grid view,
and select the photos you want to apply
this white balance change to (as shown
here). If you want to apply the correc-
tion to all your photos from the shoot
at once, you can just press Command-A
(PC: Ctrl-A) to Select All your photos. It
doesn't matter if your original gets selected
again—won't hurt a thing. If you look in
the bottom row of the grid here, you can
see that the second photo is the one
I corrected the white balance on.
TIP: Choosing Other Adjustments
Although here we're just copying-and-
pasting a White Balance setting, you can
use this function to copy-and-paste as
many attributes as you want. If I've made
a few edits in an area, I would just turn
on the checkbox for that entire area in
the Copy Settings dialog (in other words,
I'd turn on the Basic Tone checkbox for
my Basic panel edits, which automatically
turns on all the tonal edit checkboxes.
It just saves time).
Step Four:
Now go under the Photo menu, under
Develop Settings, and choose Paste
Settings (as shown here), or use the key-
board shortcut Command-Shift-V (PC:
Ctrl-Shift-V) , and the White Balance
setting you copied earlier will be applied
to all your selected photos (as seen here,
where the white balance has been cor-
rected on all those selected photos).
TIP: Fixing Just One or Two Photos
If I'm in the Develop module, fixing just
one or two photos, I fix the first photo,
then in the Filmstrip, I move to the other
photo I want to have the same edits and
I click the Previous button at the bottom
of the right side Panels area, and all the
changes I made to the previously selected
photo are now applied to that photo.
 
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