Community Expert , /t5/photoshop-ecosystem-discussions/why-is-file-size-of-smart-objects-unnecessarily-big/m-p/10497142#M249333 Jun 07, 2019 Jun 07, 2019 Copy link to clipboard Copied In Response To JJMack Hi JJ Lightroom support for PSB should be the same...
This is, I assume, incorrect as the file size is actually far bigger than this! I'm saving as Large Document Format and Layers. Votes Upvote Translate Translate Report Report Reply Correct answer by petere21960639 AUTHOR Explorer , Feb 17, 2019 Copy link to clipboard I’ve figured ...
Community Expert , /t5/photoshop-ecosystem-discussions/why-is-file-size-of-smart-objects-unnecessarily-big/m-p/10497142#M249333 Jun 07, 2019 Jun 07, 2019 Copy link to clipboard Copied In Response To JJMack Hi JJ Lightroom support for PSB should ...
Sure there has been the odd time I've had to rummage around the cutting room floor looking for some saving part of a take and if (yes, yet another option ) 'use embedded timecode when inserting clips into Multitrack' is ticked then the clip goes back...
My conclusion is the Photoshop .psd file stores an unnecessary rendered copy of each smart object layer. To demonstrate the issue try this: 1. Open a file as a smart object and save. Look at the file size, you would expect a small overhead to the...
My conclusion is the Photoshop .psd file stores an unnecessary rendered copy of each smart object layer. To demonstrate the issue try this: 1. Open a file as a smart object and save. Look at the file size, you would expect a small overhead to th...
My conclusion is the Photoshop .psd file stores an unnecessary rendered copy of each smart object layer. To demonstrate the issue try this: 1. Open a file as a smart object and save. Look at the file size, you would expect a small overhead to th...
My conclusion is the Photoshop .psd file stores an unnecessary rendered copy of each smart object layer. To demonstrate the issue try this: 1. Open a file as a smart object and save. Look at the file size, you would expect a small overhead to th...
My conclusion is the Photoshop .psd file stores an unnecessary rendered copy of each smart object layer. To demonstrate the issue try this: 1. Open a file as a smart object and save. Look at the file size, you would expect a small overhead to the...
My conclusion is the Photoshop .psd file stores an unnecessary rendered copy of each smart object layer. To demonstrate the issue try this: 1. Open a file as a smart object and save. Look at the file size, you would expect a small overhead to the size of the...