- [Instructor] This tutorial will show you how to export your
photos into final formats such as TIFF and JPEG. First part of the tutorial
demonstrates the simplest way to export your photos and then we can move on to
a more advanced workflow with more features. Skip ahead to the latter
part if you need to. I'd like to export these
six photos to JPEG. I'll Shift select them and
choose Export in the toolbar. My selected photos are
now shown in the browser on the right-hand side whilst the export viewer is showing how your photos will look after export so it's easy to tweak the
settings of your export recipes. Capture One is preloaded with a number of export recipes here. As I said earlier, I'd
like to export to JPEG so I'll activate the recipe
by checking the box here. As this is the first time I've
exported from Capture One, I'll need to define a
default export location, which all the export
recipes can use if I wish. I'll go and choose my pictures folder. To change the default export
location at any point, just click here. I would like them to go
into their own folder within my pictures folder
so they're better organized. Format in the naming tool is
currently set to image name, meaning the exported photo
will simply share the same name as shown here. Format and size shows me the settings of the currently chosen export recipe. Note, if I choose something
else, the settings change. Finally, I'll click Export and here's how it looks in the Finder. Don't forget when you're
in the Export dialogue, you can activate more
than one export recipe by checking the adjacent box
for a simultaneous export. Now let's move on to a
more advanced workflow. To reveal all available export tools, check the show all options box here. This enables more features to
key into broader workflows. For this example, let's make a two and a
half thousand pixel wide optimized JPEG for web
gallery also with a watermark. First, I'll make a new export
recipe by clicking plus here and give it a recognizable name. I would like to give this
recipe a unique location and not use the catalog default, so I'll pick one here
and select my Dropbox. Note that each export recipe
can either use the catalog or session default,
have a unique location, or be placed within the
same folder as the original. To prevent the photos getting mixed into the top level of my Dropbox, I use a combination of text and token so they're nicely organized. Entering slash means Capture One will make a further subfolder
after the my website folder. I'd like to automate this to today's date. Click here to choose a subfolder token. I'll filter to the date
tokens and pick current date and change the format to my liking. I'm happy to overwrite any photos that were previously exported to make sure the folder only
contains the newest edits. So we'll change the
option here to overwrite. I'd also like to give any photo using this recipe a unique name. Again, I'll use another
token, this time recipe name, and separate the tokens with an underscore so it's easier to read. As I said earlier, I
want to resize this JPEG to two and a half thousand pixels so I need to pick the right settings in the format and size tool. First of all, I'll change to JPEG and the ICC profile to sRGB and change the scaling to width and set that to two and
a half thousand pixels. The export viewer is continuously
proofing to the settings in the format and size
and adjustments tool. Make sure you're viewing
at 100% to visualize exactly how your photos
will look when exported. Note, when I highlight another recipe with different scaling, the viewer changes to represent that. The viewer also shows me the
level of JPEG compression so I can accurately set
that to the best compromise between quality and file size. In the adjustments tool, I'd like to add some output
sharpening for screen as scaling a photo can
negatively impact the sharpness. I'm happy with the sharpening
and JPEG compression so I'll zoom back out so I can position my watermark correctly. I'm going to use an image-based watermark. I want the opacity to be
100% and I'll reposition it by choosing the move
watermark cursor tool here. I think I'll make it a bit smaller too. I don't want the camera
metadata embedded into the JPEGs so I'll uncheck that option. Finally, a quick browse through the photos means I can check how the watermark looks and I'm ready to export. A helpful summary is shown here, and I can begin the export
process by clicking here. If you need to cancel the
export for any reason, click on the X in the
activity window here. And here's how it looks in the Finder. You can see I'm in my Dropbox. The first folder is the manually
created one, my website. The second folder was
automatically created by the token current date. And then finally, we can
see the exported photos, which also contain the recipe
name in their filename. If you remember, we added
the token recipe name in the naming tool. To export more photos using
the previous settings, simply long press on the Export icon here and choose Export with previous settings. Alternatively, you can use the shortcut Command or Control + D. This simply skips the export dialog and starts exporting immediately using the previously selected recipes.