Auto tone UI Request

I'm experiencing a disconnect between the Autotone functionality (in Library) and the manual changes I make in Develop. My issue is that these 2 actions are not connected in the UI, so that I can't connect them in a useful workflow.
I use Autotone to give me an idea, so I can use/modify or just see what the app recommends. I would like to see the settings applied under Autotone in History (expand that row to reveal details) and modify. Instead I end up starting manually in Develop. These processes are more separate in the UI than the workflow... should be for optimal processing.
Basically, the settings applied info is already displayed on the various sliders (right panels). There's no reason they couldn't be shown in the History too - in 1 place where they can be scanned. History is a very useful tool ; )
I would prefer to stay in 1 tab for the whole process, it takes too long to switch the whole UI around... Thanks!

Yes, i tried to do that but it looks like the there is some fundamental restriction imposed by OIM . To have view attributes , you must have modify permission as well ..
please check my other thread on this .
'View User Details'  Authorization Privilige Issue
Thanks for all your help . Appreciate your help on this.
Thnks
Sid

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    Hi,
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    Let me suggest another approach. First, no one checklist approach like I'm about to suggest works for every photo. But when you learn how to use the sliders yourself, and not rely on the automatic and strongest ones, like Auto Tone and Contrast, your photos will look better than you even realized. Seriously! I know what you're saying:
    I take 200 photos at a time, and I don't have time to play with sliders for each photo. Hear me out, though, because you do. Once you get the hang of it, you'll learn to do all this so fast, well less than one minute per keeper shot, and you'll see that it's worth the small amount of time it takes.
    First look at all your Imported shots and quickly weed out most of them. Don't try to save the ones where your main subject is out-of-focus or turned away at the last second, or badly overexposed shots, or for whatever reason, aren't worth editing time because you know you have better ones... and you should weed out MOST shots (maybe at least 150) if you took 200! Be a tough editor! Hit the X key as you look at ones to cull, then click Filter by black flag until all the Rejected photos Only are isolated, check them one more time to be sure you didn't X some you want by mistake, ctrl-A them to highlight all the Rejected ones ONLY, and hit Delete to blow them all away, From Disk. Congratulate yourself, because you just saved a lot of editing time.
    Assuming the Exposure was in the right ballpark, fix Color Temp first. For your first keeper shot, move that Temp slider near upper right of Develop, almost certainly to the right for Canon Raw shots, to warm the faces a bit. You probably don't want the kids' faces ruddy red, but a little warming so that white jerseys just begin to go slightly to the red side of white, makes your outdoor people photos glow. It wouldn't be surprising to see family soccer photos in the 6000-6500 range look best. If you want cold journalistic realism, leave white jerseys pure white and Temp down in the 4000-5000 range on a cloudy day or 5000-6000 range on a sunny one. Now, if one shot's right, and
    if your light didn't change during the shoot (sun going in and out of clouds, sun setting, field lights turning on halfway through the game), you can fix Temp for all your remaining shots with just a couple of clicks! Leave the first shot you fixed Temp for highlighted, and ctrl-A the whole filmstrip (or, alternatively, you can just ctrl-click the ones taken in the same light). Now click the Sync button that appears near the lower right corner of Develop. A window pops. Make sure White Balance is checked, and click Synchronize. (Every field checked here gets applied the same as on the first highlighted shot to all your subsequently highlighted shots when you do this. Since you haven't changed anything else yet, you don't have to uncheck the other boxes-- it won't matter. But later, after you've made other adjustments to other shots, you might only want to leave the boxes checked for fields you do want applied the same to all highlighted photos.) When you click Synchronize, watch all the highlighted photos in the filmstrip at the bottom get a warmer color balance. You can always later make more refined adjustments to individual shots or groups of shots that go too red or not warm enough.
    The next thing to fix is the Exposure. Get in the habit of constantly consulting that Histogram graph at the top of the right column. Ideally, though this isn't always possible or ideal, but generally, you'd like to see neither triangle in the upper right and left corners
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    Or watch your grass with soccer shots while you move Exposure back and forth. Grass should look middle green, not too bright, and not dull-muddy-dark. Or watch faces. If you still have a triangle on the upper right of Histogram, which means highlight detail is blowing out, try sliding Recovery to the right just until the upper right triangle disappears, if possible. (It isn't always possible, even with Recovery at 100.) If you still have a triangle on the upper left of Histogram (that one means shadows are muddy with no detail), try sliding Blacks down from 5 towards 0, just until the triangle goes away. Sometimes it's easier to make a triangle go away by moving Exposure a bit. If there's no triangle on the upper left, try increasing Black slowly just until one appears in the upper left, then back off a bit until it just goes away again. If there are harsh shadows, increase Fill Light to brighten shadows a bit until it looks right. Losing the triangles is a general goal but not as important as having photos look right to you. It's a juggling act. Sometimes when you remove the triangles, the grass is muddy brownish, faces look wrong, or highlights are too dull. Maybe you move Exposure, Highlights or Blacks to put one or both triangles back but leave the overall photo better.
    Now just do two more things, especially as you're learning this: first, increase Clarity. Probably a bunch. If faces go too harsh on you with Clarity at a highsetting, and they can in closeup, you may want about a 20-45 on Clarity. Many photos look best with even higher Clarity settings, even 100 for landscapes. Now bump Vibrance up, probably to the left of the Clarity slider, though. Too high a setting on Vibrance makes colors looks cartoonish and fake. Are faces too ruddy or foliage too over-the-top? Back off on Vibrance.
    Look at the Histogram one more time and touch up Recovery and Blacks again if needed to get rid of barely reappearing triangles.
    I recommend you do not move the following sliders, generally, for 99% of your photos, anyway: Tint (just usually not needed if the camera is doing color balance correctly), and Brightness, Contrast, and Saturation, all of which are ham-handed ways of doing what you do more precisely with the other sliders. About the only time you need Saturation is to move it left with a rare shot that for some reason has too much color especially red even with Vibrance set to 0. (Maybe your camera is set to Vivid.)
    Doing these things will make most of your photos look WAY better than hitting Auto Tone. And once you get the hang of it, as I said, you can do each photo in well less than one minute, and you only do this on your keepers, so it doesn't take much time.

  • Can I Create An Auto Tone Plus Half Stop Preset?

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  • Camera RAW auto tone settings applied to jpegs

    I posted this in the Windows Bridge forum, but a camera raw preference controls this so I am also posting here.
    On jpeg files without any RAW setting applied, Bridge still applies RAW settings to the thumbnails and the preview are thus display incorrectly. Opening the file shows the jpeg as it should be, without RAW settings applied.
    I have RAW preferences set to apply auto settings to RAW files without any current settings.
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    I posted this in the Windows Bridge forum, but a camera raw preference controls this so I am also posting here.
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  • Ever noticed that Auto Tone performs slightly different adjustments when applied during import as opposed to when applied in the Develop module? I've just run some experiments using LR 5.7.1 Camera Raw 8.7.1 using Canon CR2 images. 3 out of 4 test images

    Original Images after applying Auto tone in the develop module
    Image
    14BD3911.CR2
    14BD3912.CR2
    14BD3913.CR2
    14BD3914.CR2
    Exposure captured
    Under
    Over
    Slightly over
    Under
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    2300
    2300
    6650
    6650
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    +7
    +6
    +6
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    +0.5
    +1.9
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    -3
    -17
    +6
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    -48
    -45
    -11
    -10
    Shadows (auto)
    +48
    +45
    +11
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    0
    0
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    -6
    -14
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    14BD3911-2.CR2
    14BD3912-2.CR2
    14BD3913-2.CR2
    14BD3914-2.CR2
    Exposure captured
    Under
    Over
    Slightly over
    Under
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    2300
    2300
    6650
    6650
    WB Tint (as shot)
    +7
    +7
    +6
    +6
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    +2.9
    +0.5
    +0.5
    +1.9
    Contrast (auto)
    +4
    -2
    -17
    +6
    Highlights (auto)
    -48
    -45
    -12
    -10
    Shadows (auto)
    +48
    +45
    +12
    +10
    Whites (auto)
    0
    0
    +22
    +29
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    -7
    -3
    -12
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    I received two email replies (BriPhoto & Rob Cole) to my above post, which are now missing here. I only mentioned Auto WB because of this statement in your PDF posted here Shared Cat:
    "Apply auto WB and Auto tone to an unmodified photo and note the changes.
    Apply auto WB and tone to another photo with very different exposure and tone and note changes to confirm that changes are different and do depend on the content of the photo being operated on (assumption)."
    You are now saying:
    "However, in this case we are talking about the SAME raw file, imported from the camera's CF card twice. One is imported with no preset, then the Auto Tone preset applied, the other is imported with the Auto Tone preset set in the import module. Both files have the SAME WB setting (As Shot) and the same Temp and Tint, as you would expect. The only differences (in LR) are in the tonal values."
    I repeated Import of the two copies of your 14BD3913 CR2 file (14BD3913.CR2, 14BD3913-2.CR2) following the above procedure. The Tone values are identical for both using LR5.7 on my Windows 7 SP1 system. I cannot duplicate your issue as outlined above.
    Is this the Auto Tone preset you are using on Import?
    Two other things you can try:
    1) Reset your LR Preferences file:
    http://members.lightroomqueen.com/Knowledgebase/Article/View/1148/198/how-do-i-delete-the- lightroom-preferences-file
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