Post photo workflow in Lightroom


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I use Adobe’s Lightroom for my photo library. For the cost it gives my powerful tools and it also make it possible to maintain a sance view of the growing amount of photos taken over the years.

Instead of list the features and functions of the applications I will instead explain which tools I use and in what order when I return home from a photo session.

Import photos and convert to DNG

Starting in the Library view, import photos and convert to DNG. for more information on DNG, read though my article on the subject!

Initiate backup

As soon as photos are on my harddrive I start to push them to an off site backup location. As long as the backup is running, the photos are kept on the memory cards.

Delete bad photos

To cut down the amount of pictures I start by looking through them all. If I see a bad picture, I press X and flag the photo for deletion.

When all photos have been looked through, from file menu I select Photo -> Delete rejected photos and by doing so remove all photos both from library and from my hard drive.

Balance exposure and color

Develop

Looking at the histogram in Develop mode, move sliders under Basic until we see a good amount of light in the picture. While doing this, I activate the highlight clipping (the two triangles in top corners of histogram) to see if I lose any details in light or dark. Shortcut ‘J’.

UWhite Balance Toolsing the White balance tool, click on a neutral part of the photo (white or grey).

SyncIf many photos have been shot in the same environment and light I then sync these photos to as many photos as possible to get a good baseline to work with.

Select multiple photos in the bottom view and then press Sync button to sync the done changes to rest of marked photos.

After these steps the rest is based on that type of photos I have shot. Steps differ alot if it has been a portrait, nature, star sky or something else.

Why use DNG?


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DNG iconTo shot in raw format has become next to the standard for serious photographers. The power is in all the extra information a raw file keep about the actual image. Using this, we can make wonders even after a shoot. To save raw files there is the in camera formats as nef, cr2 and more. Or you can use DNG, so why should you?

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Using the heal brush in Adobe Lightroom


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Many times when taking pictures outside or when travelling we come home to see that there have been dust or other distracting particles on our lenses that gave blemishes on our photos. If you are using Adobe Lightroom this is however an easy fix in Develop mode.

This is a quick guide to how you use the Heal tool in Lightroom and I am using version 4.1 but the tool has been around since at least version 3. If you do not have Lightroom, please read the article on how to get the same result using GIMP!

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