Please leave a comment below on any thoughts or questions you have. If you are a Windows PC user, check out a similar video here: th-cam.com/video/Q6zBPBZQxwk/w-d-xo.htmlsi=-rAA_lEA1iiGdhj_
Thank you bro, this method worked like a charm😃. Though it did show a minor warning for each process, "Warning: [minor] Creating non-standard IPTC in PNG". Any idea what exactly this means?
@@BlokhinFilms Bro, one more question, in the second and third columns, there is a comma nd the corresponding number. what is its significance and will the shell command run even if that part is deleted?
There could be many reasons why it does not work and unfortunately I cannot pinpoint the exact reason for you. If you installed Exiftool as suggested on its website, typing exiftool in Terminal should work.
Please leave a comment below on any thoughts or questions you have. If you are a Windows PC user, check out a similar video here: th-cam.com/video/Q6zBPBZQxwk/w-d-xo.htmlsi=-rAA_lEA1iiGdhj_
Hi, want to say thank you so much! I have watched this video maybe 10 times over 2 years, and finally got it worked!!
Oh, very cool. It is a life saver in stock photography.
Escelente tutorial, me ayudo mucho, Gracias
Thank you bro, this method worked like a charm😃. Though it did show a minor warning for each process, "Warning: [minor] Creating non-standard IPTC in PNG". Any idea what exactly this means?
Glad it worked for you! I do not know what it means, but you can always Google it!
@@BlokhinFilmswill do 😁
@@BlokhinFilms Bro, one more question, in the second and third columns, there is a comma nd the corresponding number. what is its significance and will the shell command run even if that part is deleted?
@@BlokhinFilms or is it just for our reference when it gets uploaded?
Hi, thanks for the tutorial.
Unfortunately this is not working for me, can it be because I'm using zsh instead of bash?
Thanks.
There could be many reasons why it does not work and unfortunately I cannot pinpoint the exact reason for you. If you installed Exiftool as suggested on its website, typing exiftool in Terminal should work.