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Exiftool help
Exiftool help





exiftool help

M8) Lightroom will not correctly calculate the correct FOV for non 6-bit encoded Lenses. For variable Aperture Zoom Lenses write the range, e.g 3.5-5.6įocal length in 35mm: on some digital Leica Cameras (e.g. Max Aperture: The Maximum Aperture of this Lens. Lightroom will automatically calculate the equivalent Focal Length. If you are using a Full Frame 20mm Lens on a MicroFourThirds or any other APS-C crop camera, write 20mm here. This will make it easier to find pictures made with this particular Lens in the Flickriver Lens search or on Pixel-Peeper.įocal Length: the actual Focal Length written on the Lens. I suggest using the full name of a Lens as from Nikon/Canon/Olympus/Whatever product catalogs. Please only use when you are familiar with exiftool, I am not responsible for any data loss if you use those advanced options. The options explained: Tab 1 (default Tab): Lens OptionsĮxiftool: Here you can set additional flags to exiftool. If you have used LensTagger before, the previous values will be shown. LensTagger will present you with a warning to make sure that you have saved all your Metadata before you proceed.Īfter pressing OK, LensTagger will show up with some Lens-data pre-filled in. Then point to File -> Plug-in Extras and choose LensTagger IMPORTANT:Before doing anything to your images, you want to save the current Metadata to the files, so hit CMD+S (CTRL+S) to do this. Switch to the Library Module and select some images. Open up Lightroom (of course) and select the images you want add data to. This manual uses Mac OS X to show the various options, but LensTagger looks almost the same on Windows, so it should not be a problem for Windows users to follow this LensTagger Manual. Now that you have installed LensTagger, it’s time to add some Lens Data into your precious images.







Exiftool help