There is a pretty awesome little feature in Photoshop that lets you open a folder full of images and save them into multiple file formats or sizes (just in case you need that). Go under the File menu, under Scripts, and choose Image Processor. In the Image Processor dialog, the first thing it wants you to tell it (in section #1) is where the folder of images that you want to process is located. So, do that first by clicking on the Select Folder button. Next (in section #2), choose where you want these new images, in their new formats (or sizes), to be saved (in other words, which folder they should be placed into when it’s done doing its thing). In section #3, you get to choose which file formats (and sizes) you want those copies saved as. You can choose to save them as JPEGs, PSDs, TIFFs, or even all three (so it would save three copies of each image in the folder you selected—one in each format). In the last section (section #4), you can type in any copyright information you want embedded into the files and, if you created an action, you can choose to apply it to these images, here. For example, if you created an action that made a watermark, you could apply it automatically on these images as they’re processed—just turn on the Run Action checkbox, and then choose the action from the pop-up menus to the right. When you’re done making your choices, click the Run button, and it does its thing—and it does it really quickly. When it’s done, you’ll find a subfolder inside the main folder you chose, with each file format’s images inside the proper folder (hey, at least it doesn’t just toss them all loose in one big folder, right?).
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