Doctor wrote:Thanks mate, ill look into lightroom now to do what i want. Will it place a watermark on the image automatically? Say a vector image that i have created that i put on all my images? Or just a small amount of text indicating whom the owner of the image is etc?
One of the first things you should do when importing your images to the Lightroom database is populate the metadata (creator contact details, copyright strings, location information, etc). Defining a Metadata Preset with some of this info and assigning it as part of the import process is the easiest way, then you can fine-tune the info in the Library
module.
When it's time to export images, there's a simple function to emboss the copyright info onto the bottom left of the image. You don't get to control the font/size/placement, but it will use the individual copyright string you've set on each image. It's a convenient size for web JPEGs, but larger exports can end up with just a smudge across the lower left corner...
There is no built-in function to emboss other images, but in LR 2 this can be done through an Export Plug-in. If you start searching I'm sure someone's already written one to do what you want.
As for converting a lot of photos to jpeg from raw, its only due to the fact that i was shooting in raw in the snow as practice, and all my friends decided that they wanted copies of the images, good or bad, but have no way of viewing raw files. I shoot mainly in raw for the editing capabilities that the files have once removed from the camera, although id much rather get the image right on the camera than through the computer, i still find the need to edit some photos to get the colours etc right......
Once you start using something like Lightroom that processes RAW files and JPEGs side-by-side, it becomes simple to just shoot everything in RAW. Tweak the WB/exposure/etc of those images that need a little tweaking, but otherwise you can just use it as a tool for organising your images..
As an analogy, when shooting C41 film you wouldn't give your friends copies of the negatives: you'd just run a set of prints off for them. Here we just export a set of JPEGs for them.