Joel, those are exactly the purposes I used it for.
After downloading the images from the Cf card via Bridge, I would use
FastStone to quickly organize the "keeper" folder by pulling up 4 images
of the same pose at a time, comparing them at 100% for focus, etc,
immediately deleting all but the best one, and flying quickly through
the folder culling images. Could open the keeper image in CS3 directly
from Faststone, edit, close, see my edited file immediately in
FastStone, and move on. Worked great for quickly cropping, and
fabulously for batch resizing and watermarking. Or batch file
conversions. Would then copy files to a subfolder "prints" and that
housed only the cropped and ready to go to the lab images. I could do
all of this very quickly. And, like you, I *never* used fastStone to
"edit". Tried to make some quick enhancements once, and didn't care at
all for what it did to the images. But it was a workhorse for all the
other necessary workflow steps. Indispensable is a good word.
If only I could find something like it for the MAC.
Candace
On 1/21/12 7:02 PM, Joel Wilcox wrote:
> Sorry to hear this Candace.
>
> Dependent as I am on FS for viewing and organizing, nothing tempts me to
> use it for editing images. The reason is that the images don't quite
> look as good natively in FS as they do in Studio or Photoshop
> ultimately. As all judgments are based on this, I just use it to flip
> images to programs that produce a better visual rendering for my taste.
> But for this it is just great, and for cleaning up folders later, it is,
> for me, indispensable.
>
> Joel W.
>
>
> lost their beloved FastStone, and can find nothing comparable.
>
--
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