have you tried the free trial of LR4, I think theyve brought the price right down as well now
Many thanks for all your answers.
The only problem is that I don't know how to automate certain things as I process usually 10 to 50 raw images at one time and I have to open them and save separately which takes a lot of time. Is it possible to open them all at the same time and after processing save all in jpg format with one click? If it is not possible I will have to try Lightroom...
have you tried the free trial of LR4, I think theyve brought the price right down as well now
Be advised LR 4 needs a decent spec computer to run well on, it also needs vista sp3 or win 7 to work.
If you highlight all the images you want to process in Bridge, you can then choose to open them all at once in the Camera Raw program. All the opened images will be in a strip down the left hand side of the interface. When you start editing one of the images, you can choose to 'Select All' or additional individual images in the list, and once additional images are chosen, the 'Synchronise' button becomes active. At this point you can choose which aspects of the editing to synchronise, all the edited settings, or just White Balance or Exposure, or a range of different settings. :shrug:
Once you finished editing, if all the images are selected you can save them all at once with whatever format settings you've chosen.
The thing to remember is that Lightroom and Photoshop are supposed to work together, not one or the other. LR is for managing, light editing, and exporting your images, whereas Photoshop is for serious editing. I use LR for 95% of my photo editing, and only really go into PS when I need to do something out of the ordinary like cloning, multiple layers etc.
The good thing about LR is that all the 'changes' you make to the photos are non destructive. They're not actually made until you export the file, whereas PS is physical pixel editing and is destructive. Once its changed, its changed.
You need to batch process them.
Here's a tutorial: http://help.adobe.com/en_US/photoshop/cs/using/WSfd1234e1c4b69f30ea53e41001031ab64-7425a.html
Morph3ous said:The thing to remember is that Lightroom and Photoshop are supposed to work together, not one or the other. LR is for managing, light editing, and exporting your images, whereas Photoshop is for serious editing.
If you mean PS could you please explain what did you mean suggesting that I should "process in Bridge"?
Many thanks
The thing to remember is that Lightroom and Photoshop are supposed to work together, not one or the other. LR is for managing, light editing, and exporting your images, whereas Photoshop is for serious editing. I use LR for 95% of my photo editing, and only really go into PS when I need to do something out of the ordinary like cloning, multiple layers etc.
The good thing about LR is that all the 'changes' you make to the photos are non destructive. They're not actually made until you export the file, whereas PS is physical pixel editing and is destructive. Once its changed, its changed.
Could you please instruct me also in what format should I save photos processed in LR? By now I always saved them as jps? If I save a processed in LR photo as jpg would it still be nondestructive?
Cheers
Most, if not all Raw editors is non destructive.
Photoshop doesn't make any changes to the RAW, when you open a RAW in PS (via ACR or Lightroom) you cannot write the changes to that file, you need to save as a new PSD (or other format) file.The good thing about LR is that all the 'changes' you make to the photos are non destructive. They're not actually made until you export the file, whereas PS is physical pixel editing and is destructive. Once its changed, its changed.
Sorry, but I think the last sentence is confusing. The bit before is fine, but the "copy of the original RAW" statement is wrong and misleading - the RAW file isn't copied, a new file is created with your develop and export settings applied.So you don't need to 'save it' as you would with PS. It's only when you want to send the photo to somewhere else (website, email, USB stick, CD etc etc) that you'll need to export it into whatever format you like, but most likely JPEG. It'll then create a copy of the original RAW with all the changes you made.
Any of the options will leave the original RAW unedited. In each case if you make any changes in PS that you want to keep you need to save the files as a PSD (for example) and assuming you have the box ticked will appear in the stack with the original in LR. LR will now treat that file as an original which is separate to the RAW file.Also, when you choose to further edit a LR file in PS, it asks you if you want to edit the original, a copy of the original, or a copy of the original with any LR changes you've made. (i.e. White Balance, exposure, cropping, saturation etc) By always choosing the 3rd option (assuming you've made LR changes) you'll forever retain an untouched copy of the original RAW file
I think too many forget this. It's called Adobe Photoshop Lightroom & they're made to work together. I use Photoshop to do my retouching & Lightroom to catalogue & organise the photographs.
In LR I generally zoom the image to 100%, move the Sharpening Amount slider to about 50 and then whilst holding the Alt key down, move the masking slider until I get a good balance of sharpness.Could you tell me what technique do you use?
samagroma said:Thanks, and I've decided to follow your example, but anyway it would be easier to be able to do everything in one editor.
I personally think far too much emphasis is placed on the non-destructive editing its pretty easy (and probably good practise) to make a copy of any file and work on that whilst keeping the original in a read only folder, regardless of file format or application.
Photoshop doesn't make any changes to the RAW, when you open a RAW in PS (via ACR or Lightroom) you cannot write the changes to that file, you need to save as a new PSD (or other format) file.
Using a decent layer structure will ensure that any work you do on the PSD will be non-destructive (layers / snapshots / smart objects etc.), It really isnt good practise to work on the background layer, the first thing I do when I open a new image in PS is Ctrl J. You can even edit JPEG's non-destructively if you want!
I personally think far too much emphasis is placed on the non-destructive editing its pretty easy (and probably good practise) to make a copy of any file and work on that whilst keeping the original in a read only folder, regardless of file format or application.
Sorry, but I think the last sentence is confusing. The bit before is fine, but the "copy of the original RAW" statement is wrong and misleading - the RAW file isn't copied, a new file is created with your develop and export settings applied.
Any of the options will leave the original RAW unedited. In each case if you make any changes in PS that you want to keep you need to save the files as a PSD (for example) and assuming you have the box ticked will appear in the stack with the original in LR. LR will now treat that file as an original which is separate to the RAW file.
If you subsequently want to edit this file you need to select "edit the original" to preserve the layers, if you select the third option (with LR changes) PS will create a new PSD file with the image as a background layer, you will lose the layer structure (in that copy only, the original will still have the layers).
If all you are using Lightroom for is organising, it's a bit of a waste, as Photoshop comes with Bridge, which is a powerful cataloging tool.
!In LR I generally zoom the image to 100%, move the Sharpening Amount slider to about 50 and then whilst holding the Alt key down, move the masking slider until I get a good balance of sharpness.