![]() ![]() compression, -c: PNG compression amount. Note: Preserve will attempt to preserve the exact input extension, but RAW files will still be converted to DNG. Accepts jpg, jpeg, png, tif, tiff, dng, or preserve. recursive, -r: If given a folder path, it will recurse into subdirectories instead of just grabbing top level file If it doesn't exist the program will attempt to create it. output, -o: Output folder to save images to. cli: Required to access CLI mode, otherwise images are treated as if passed by an external editor. : \Program Files \ Topaz Labs LLC\Topaz Photo AI>Options : Transcription of screenshot below: : \Program Files \ Topaz Labs LLC\Topaz Photo A1)" Topaz Photo A1" -help I would like to see all of them have the option to create a default preset which happens by default, but at least the “last used settings” option would be very helpful in Adjust AI.(My first few tries didn’t work, sorry, but I got something to happen with the last command.) At least Topaz Adjust and Topaz Studio will, after being run once in the session, default to the last chosen settings. The biggest issue is Topaz Adjust AI, which does nothing if run from an action. I can then inspect the results and adjust if needed. I can run a batch on all the images, say 100. This gives me the option to adjust the opacity or add a mask as appropriate (or perhaps rerun topaz manually and adjust differently for that specific image) for the image, but doing the action as a batch process makes it more efficient. I like to run an action and have it applied to a layer. I don’t use most Topaz generated adjustments directly on my images. My interest is only for my own use on my own computer. I think adding an API feature like this is a great move, since it gives developers a way to develop cool tools. Hundreds of dollars per license is not out of the question. ![]() Most studios would be willing to pay a premium for such features. There is nothing like it for us as far as I know. If they supported Linux, or command line options, they could really become a staple tool for visual effects. However, they seem entirely focused on the amateur stills photography market. Topaz has an amazing opportunity to extend their business model to include to those who work in Visual Effects and post production. This is really a deal breaker for me because I almost never process a single image at a time, and cannot process hundreds of images one at a time. ![]() Perhaps there is a reason they chose to remove these features from the newer applications. The interfaces appear to share a lot of the same GUI features, just with limited functionality. I totally agree that Denoise AI and Sharpen AI should have the same batch processing functionality as Gigapixel, which now can even handle image sequences. Hopefully we can get a fix soon, at least for the Restore Detail setting to be saved in Photoshop actions. If I double click on the filter, Denoise AI opens with the default settings rather than those used when the filter was saved. The same is true if I try to use Denoise AI as a Smart Object filter. Note also that if I double click on the Denoise AI step in the action to change the recorded values, Denoise AI reverts all sliders to their defaults (0.15, 0.15 and 0.1) rather than showing the previously recorded settings. As Denoise AI doesn’t remember the last used settings (which Studio does), there doesn’t seem to be a workaround for this. So unless you always want the default setting for Restore Detail, batch processing to Denoise AI using Photoshop actions doesn’t currently work. It seems that the Restore Detail reverts to its default setting although the other settings are maintained. When I played the action back, the settings used were 0.2, 0.2 and 0.1. ![]() I recorded an action in Photoshop using settings of 0.2, 0.2 and 0.5 for Remove Noise, Enhance Sharpness and Restore Detail respectively. I tried batching from Photoshop to Denoise AI and although the action plays, it doesn’t use the recorded value for Restore Detail. I also batch process from Photoshop to Studio using actions. ![]()
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