demasoni wrote:
Greetings,
I need to submit images for an initial gallery review and they require "flattened jpegs." I know what jpeg means, but "flattened?" How do I make my images in Aperture 3.0 flattened? I do minor enhancements like saturation and contrast adjustments and some cropping. Are they talking about Photoshop?
They are most likely talking about Photoshop-like concepts... but these even apply to Aperture. Photoshop is, by nature, a destructive editor -- meaning when you change a photo, the original is "destroyed" and replaced with the change. Since this makes a lot of photographers cringe, most people learn to create "layers" in photoshop (e.g. adjustment layers, etc.)
When they use the term "flattened", I suspect they are referring to the notion of collapsing the image back down to just what you see as a finished product and changing it as a JPEG (a JPEG doesn't have "layers").
Aperture, likewise, is a non-destructive editor. It maintains the "master" image and a meta-data list of every adjustment you've made. Take the "master" and re-apply the list of changes and you arrive at a finished result -- but it's not saved on disk as a finished photo... it's saved as a "master" and list of changes.
In Aperture, selecting the image(s) and then navigating to "File" -> "Export" -> "Version..." will allow you to save in JPEG format. This exported file will be saved with all of your adjustments applied as just a single simple JPEG image.