Saturday, March 28, 2009

update images....

So I knew about this feature but had forgotten....

If you are working in Lightroom, export the file, set up the post-processing to open in Photoshop it will open up in Photoshop. Which is great! Especially when I am working on an album.

But what happens when you are working on an image and realize you wanted to make a few more changes in Lightroom?

Without closing the file in Photoshop, you can go into Lightroom make additional changes and export again. What happens then amazed me the first time, I thought Photoshop would crash or open 2 files that were the same, but instead it told me that the image had been updated and if I wanted to update the current file with the changes.

This is really helpful if I have multiple files open , for example, realize I had the wrong color temp and need to change them all. It seems to make my workflow smoother and I seem to screw up less.


Paul Weinrauch
www.weinrauchphotography.com
www.weinrauchphoto.com
www.rockprinting.com
www.weinrauch.blogspopt.com

Saturday, March 21, 2009

parent folders in Lightroom....

Lightroom is a great way to keep all your photos organized.
But the downfall of Lightroom doing such a good is that it can become very disorganized! VERY!

So today I was importing some photos of a headshot from this weekend and realized I imported it in such a way that it screwed up my "flow."

The way I organize:
I keep my main catalog simple; 4 main folders and then have sub-folders inside of that for different jobs. This way my folder tree stays simple and I can expand just the folder(s) I need.


I imported images in a way that it created a folder outside of my main folder even though on the hard drive it was in the same folder as the rest. OOPS!


I wasn't able to re-create the problem. But there is a solution:


You can right click the folder that ended up outside of the main folder and click on "add Parent Folder" and it will automatically add it to the parent folder.











Not only does this keep things organized but if by accident Lightroom loses track of all you images you can just re-link the main folders.

Friday, March 20, 2009

The back slash in the Library Module

In my last post I was talking about using the \ key to toggle between before/after in the Develop module.....

Today I sat down and found that my library filter bar was gone!!!! When you hit the \ key when your in the Library module it closes and opens your Libray filter bar....

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Photoshop Lightroom 2.3 readme files

I am a little late getting this on my blog but better late than never... there are a few important details in the document.

http://www.adobe.com/support/photoshoplightroom/ts/documents/kb408844/Lightroom_23_ReadMe.pdf

Monday, March 16, 2009

before.... after....before....after....

SO up until now before/after has eluded me. It is a feature in Lightroom that I just didn't understand. Not that's it complicated, just new and scary....

Situation:

I am working on a photo and I want to see what it looked like from the start I would just go to my history panel and click on the the first history state. Until I realized all needed to do is press \ in Develop module and tada! I could toggle between before and after....

But what if I didn't want the before to go to the original history state but the 2nd or 3rd. I would go over to the history panel and right click on the last history state that I wanted to include, and click the "copy history step settings to before" now when ever I click on \ it will take me to that time in history to compare with my present version. This is useful when I have synchronized settings with multiple images and want to keep those changes when I am looking at before/after views of an individual image. This is on way to do it and have found this to be the quickest one for me.

You can do the before/after with 2up with the shortcut Y. But that is another post.

Paul Weinrauch
303-909-1059
www.rockprinting.com

Friday, March 13, 2009

NAPP offering $10.00 off....

So if you are planning on attending Scott Kelbys Lightroom seminar in Denver (or anywhere), make sure that you sign up at least 21 days in advance and you will save an additional $10.00

Heck yeah.... Every penny counts.....


Paul

Weinrauch Photography llc
weinrauchphoto.com
weinrauchphotography.com
weinrauch.blogspot.com
rockprinting.com

Monday, March 9, 2009

Combining Catalogs

So to finish up about tethering......

I had a small hiccup.... All those images I shot to my laptop while using lightroom I had changed the original raw file; I added metadata, cropped, changed the white balance, etc...

SO I couldn't just copy all the raw files to my main drive and then import because I would lose all those changes. What to do? Seems simple, should be simple..... but I didn't have an answer. So I figured it out!

But as it turns out it is really simple
File> Import from Catalog...
then follow the directions....
Import from catalo has many other advantages besides just this one. :)

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Tethering....

I have been wanting to tether my camera with my laptop using Lightroom and yesterday I had my opportunity.

And I would like to say WOW.

Up until now I have been using Bridge to view the images as my cameras software downloaded the images to my computer as I shot. It was workable but not efficient. I would look at the image in Bridge then if I wanted to show my client a better version I would open in Photoshop, color correct, crop, and usually add a simple curve. That all took a bit of time and my client would be over my shoulder waiting.....


But with Lightroom, you have Bridge and Photoshop all wrapped into one, plus more.

A quick rundown (you want to know exactly how email me or call) :


1. Using the camera software I would direct the image to a folder called "watchedfolder" - no changes to file name or any other changes.


2. I would have Lightroom set to auto import (watching the folder "watchedfolder"). This would move, rename the file, and add all my metadata. After the first shot I would Crop the image as I envisioned and do a custom white point. I would save that as preset (only the white point and crop) and then go back to my auto import setting and tell it to add that preset. Now for the remainder of that shoot it would crop, color correct, add my metadata, and change file name without me doing a thing.

3. On the next interior shot all I would have to do is take the shot, make any changes like crop and white point and then update the preset. From that shot on it would use the new preset as it auto imported.


Go Lightroom!