Thanks!
Yeah, now i know what they are, i totally agree with MikeeB
you could replicate it, its just a shortcut.
<bender>Bite my shiny metal ass</bender>

... using downloaded actions on your work?![]()

I wouldn't say so. But I feel that its better to see a style and make your own way there. You'll create your own style on the way. Imagine if you could push a button and get the "Annie Lebowitz look" or the "Dave Hill style". You may have a great photo but is it really yours? Their look and style has been developed over years of playing around with photography.
Why would it be cheating?![]()
Tbh, I wouldn't personally want to do it. What I have done is looked at actions and lightroom pre-sets to see how they have gotten a result, but I wouldn't want to use them on my images. As Pete said, any complement on my processing would make me feel like a fraud.
One of the reasons wedding photographers tend to use actions like the totally rad actions is not to all look alike, it's to save time. When you have a 1000+ pics to process per wedding and maybe 3 weddings over a weekend time becomes a serious concern, if it's adding a popular effect then they may well look similar, but then a group shot looks pretty much like another group shot, does that mean we shouldn't do group shots because another tog does them? WayneDepends what you mean by actions. Actions to resize your photos and things like that are fine. However, after I played around with some actions that were downloadable styles I decided it was wrong. I'm essentially downloading a style and pasting it all over my photos. When people say "Great processing!" they're not complimenting me because I didn't do it. I used the Totally Rad action pack and I found that a lot of wedding/portrait photographers do. What seperates them from the next if they all use 5D's, prime lenses and exactly the same actions for processing? In the end I felt that its better to take the long road and learn more than to push a button for a style. You'll be a better photographer for it.
Well, if one was plainly indulging in say, a batch process, of a few hundred images that require the same White balance, exposure adjustements and contrast etc then actions or 'sync settings' in LR is just being clever and saving time, but if your working on a master piece that has your heart and soul in it then it's suppose it's a little different.
One of the reasons wedding photographers tend to use actions like the totally rad actions is not to all look alike, it's to save time. When you have a 1000+ pics to process per wedding and maybe 3 weddings over a weekend time becomes a serious concern, if it's adding a popular effect then they may well look similar, but then a group shot looks pretty much like another group shot, does that mean we shouldn't do group shots because another tog does them? Wayne
If you have developed the action/preset then thats fine. Its what you've made. The issue that I have is the use off the shelf styles over that of developing your own. The whole point of Lightroom is that you can load in 1000 images, set it to a preset on load and have a coffee while your entire shoot is developed to your liking. Nothing wrong with that if its your preset.
I have no issues with preset and actions, as long as I was the one who created it. Its just saving me the donkey work. Also wouldnt have an issue using someone elses actions to generate borders and stuff.
Its just that I, personally, wouldnt want to apply a whole host of someones processing actions to my images.
Because, essentially, some would say, that someone else is doing all the work for me.
