Hi. Whenever I'm automating the task, it keeps asking me to agree to the settings. I want to run the same settings each time without it asking. How would I go about doing this?
I got really excited for this one, cropping people and making headshots, but realized your definition of "subject detection" is the outer edges of the photo. Any chance this could be made to "select subject" where it finds the person and then you can adjust how much border around them you'd like?
The script does use Select Subject. Then adds a margin a percentage of subject size detected. If you are not getting this result, there must be a reason. Is a log written that indicates problems perhaps?
@@wc7 Oh thank you! When I tried on a person against a photo backdrop, it cropped to the edge of the backdrop, and seemed to refuse to come in tighter. I will definitely play with it more!
@@aussie2uGA If a particular image doesn't seem to work, open it in Photoshop and try Select Subject manually. See if that provides a clue as to what the problem might be. The script is only as good at finding the subject as Photoshop is good at finding the subject. If Photoshop has trouble, the script has the exact same result.
I've been trying to figure out this exact thing. I ran your trial and ran into a few snags, I'd say about 75% of 390 pictures came out perfectly. I'm wondering if I could should you a few examples of where it went wrong, it may be something I have to do while taking the pictures, or maybe there's a setting I could add to the script or a sensitivity of the subject select function. Anyway, thank you for this. It's almost like I wonder if it can do a reverse subject select, like find the background instead (which in my images is always the same color) and then crop based on where the background isn't instead of where the subject is? Does that make sense.
The script relies on Photoshop feature Select Subject. The script can't do it any better than Photoshop can. There isn't anything I could do different. Only other thing that might help, but not much from what I've seen: ruclips.net/video/oPdPDZWbUX4/видео.html
Thanks for the response. Yes, I saw that the select subject was key based on one of your previous notes here (and as you pointed out that is definitely the culprit). That's why I was wondering if an alternative might be to select the background (with a range of 20-30) that will be used in all the photos and then inverse that selection and use that as the subject and crop around that? @@wc7
I waited a long time. ^^
Thanks
Your amazing sir 👌👌👌👌🙏🙏🙏🙏
Thanks
@@wc7 🚾😊
Excellent, you need more subscribers !
Thanks.
Hi. Whenever I'm automating the task, it keeps asking me to agree to the settings. I want to run the same settings each time without it asking. How would I go about doing this?
I got really excited for this one, cropping people and making headshots, but realized your definition of "subject detection" is the outer edges of the photo. Any chance this could be made to "select subject" where it finds the person and then you can adjust how much border around them you'd like?
The script does use Select Subject. Then adds a margin a percentage of subject size detected. If you are not getting this result, there must be a reason. Is a log written that indicates problems perhaps?
@@wc7 Oh thank you! When I tried on a person against a photo backdrop, it cropped to the edge of the backdrop, and seemed to refuse to come in tighter. I will definitely play with it more!
@@aussie2uGA If a particular image doesn't seem to work, open it in Photoshop and try Select Subject manually. See if that provides a clue as to what the problem might be. The script is only as good at finding the subject as Photoshop is good at finding the subject. If Photoshop has trouble, the script has the exact same result.
I've been trying to figure out this exact thing. I ran your trial and ran into a few snags, I'd say about 75% of 390 pictures came out perfectly. I'm wondering if I could should you a few examples of where it went wrong, it may be something I have to do while taking the pictures, or maybe there's a setting I could add to the script or a sensitivity of the subject select function. Anyway, thank you for this.
It's almost like I wonder if it can do a reverse subject select, like find the background instead (which in my images is always the same color) and then crop based on where the background isn't instead of where the subject is? Does that make sense.
The script relies on Photoshop feature Select Subject. The script can't do it any better than Photoshop can. There isn't anything I could do different. Only other thing that might help, but not much from what I've seen: ruclips.net/video/oPdPDZWbUX4/видео.html
Thanks for the response. Yes, I saw that the select subject was key based on one of your previous notes here (and as you pointed out that is definitely the culprit). That's why I was wondering if an alternative might be to select the background (with a range of 20-30) that will be used in all the photos and then inverse that selection and use that as the subject and crop around that? @@wc7
@@edwardbach344 If Photoshop had such a feature exposed to script, I could call on it. As far as I know, there isn't such a feature.
Thanks a lot - it's still a very helpful tool! And I enjoy your videos too.@@wc7
Wow thitis u want
Thanks