Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2015/10/14
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Your' not alone Frank the workflo is very popular as in just using Lightroom and never moving the image into Photoshop. I'm sure most of the images I see on the interent are done just like that. Photoshop has gotten to be for more hard core workers it would seem. Photoshop is good because if you ever need to go beyond color and density corrections and sharpening and healing you can look up how to do it and it will tell you the several ways you can do that. And that stuff happens. You end up needing to do stuff which is not obvious at first. So if you learn one incremental thing a month they add up if like me you've had it for 25 years you are at least an advanced intermediate. But I'm not as good at it as this would indicated. Photoshop was launched 25 years ago 1990 and I got it a year later. But it was years before I ever had a scan made and got to work with it on one of my own images. Each upgrade was looked upon with excitement by all my photographer friends and we'd be up all night figuring it out teaching each other tricks. I'd hit the go button on a filter and go make a pot of coffee. Around the time I'd finish my first cup the filter would be don't doing what it was supposed to do and the image would pop up on the screen all textures or whatever. Wow did we all make some terrible images! The key being to be able to select the part of the image that you want to do something to. I now to more than half of what I need to do with in image in adobe camera raw then opening it in Photoshop for some final tweaks. From all I'm told ACR is very similar to Lightroom in basic respects. But as the groupies say: it ain't Mick Jagger. On 10/14/15 3:55 AM, "Frank Dernie" <Frank.Dernie at btinternet.com> wrote: > I have had Photoshop since V3 Mark, so not as long as you. > OTOH about 75% of what it is designed for I have never used, since it is > not > really only appropriate for conventional photography but mainly creating > artwork sometimes using the last vestiges of a photograph as a root. I am > neither artistic enough, nor talented enough at those Photoshop specifics, > to > do any of this. > > What I like about Lightroom is that it stripped out of Photoshop those > features it had which were very specific to presenting photographs in a > normal > way. > > When I bought Photoshop originally I had to buy it with a whole suite of > other > programmes which I did not use at all. > > Now I can buy a photographer-centric version of Photoshop - Lightroom, > without > paying for all the useless, to me, functionality of the full programme. I > was > a bit like not having to buy a whole suite of programmes just to get > Photoshop. > I do not consider it to be inexpensive in comparison to Photoshop since it > is > effectively just buying the part of Photoshop which I need and paying nowt > for > the part that I don?t ever use. > > On top of that its file organisation is better than Bridge for photographs > in > my opinion. > > So IME the full version of Photoshop is a waste of money for a photographer > whose intention is to produce excellent quality prints from their > exposures, > and catalogue them rather than take the exposure as a basis for a bit of > artwork. > > cheers, > > Frank > >> On 13 Oct 2015, at 17:22, Mark Rabiner <mark at rabinergroup.com> wrote: >> >> I know a lot of people who never stopped using Photoshop. >> Not Adobe Photoshop LightRoom 6. But Adobe Photoshop Photoshop that has >> dominated quality digital photography before digital photography even >> existed in 1991 which is when I started using it.. >> There are new people buying it everyday as well. >> It's like your supposed to be embarrassed to be a liberal. I'm ok with >> both >> Photoshop use AND being a lefty. >> >> I'm sure Lightroom has the market share and some good top people are using >> it. It cost $142.99 cents which is what a cheap here today gone tomorrow >> third part filter cost for the real Photoshop. I'm sure it comes free with >> some scanners and cameras. >> If you don't want to pay 5 times more for the real Photoshop and make the >> commitment to using that's great. But lets not pretend Photoshop doesn't >> exist shall we? The real one. Adobe Bridge browser still is downloadable >> as >> part of the CC Adobe system and I've been using it for close to a decade >> and >> never heard of Mechanic. >> >> Capture One comes free when you get a Digital camera back from Phase One, >> Mamiya and Leaf the software is free and called Capture One 8 DB its what >> people use when they use digital backs or who want their cameras tethered >> to >> huge screen so art directors and clients can direct their shoots and they >> know they're getting paid because whatever happens is not going to be >> blamed >> on them. Its not their image. Now you can tether up your Canon or Nikon >> to >> it. >> Its still thought of my anybody I ever met as a medium format digital >> solution though I know one guy who switched from Photoshop to Capture One >> something a few years ago and I've not seen a pic he's done nor him >> since. >> I think the program might be tethering him wirelessly. He's off somewhere >> harvesting silicon for the big take over. >> >> >> >> On 10/12/15 11:50 PM, "Richard Man" <richard at richardmanphoto.com> >> wrote: >> >>> Adobe is having issues with ONE version of Lightroom. The sky is >>> not >> falling. >> >> >> >> On Mon, Oct 12, 2015 at 7:54 PM, Gerry Walden >>> <gerry.walden at icloud.com> >> wrote: >> >>> In my opinion LR is the only way to go if >>> you want a fully integrated >>> piece of well developed software. It has a few >>> detractors, mostly those who >>> object to paying monthly for it, but for every >>> detractor there are hundreds >>> of very satisfied users. >>> >>> For serious users >>> there are, I am afraid, very few alternatives. Probably >>> the one that comes >>> closest is the combination of Photo Mechanic and Capture >>> One Pro. Both are >>> extremely good pieces of software but C1Pro is a bit >>> quirky and can take >>> some time to get used to. Once you are used to it and >>> used to Photo Mechanic >>> the combination of the two can be very good but they >>> are not as integrated >>> as LR is. I am sorry to say that the market has been >>> pretty much sewn up by >>> LR, like it or lump it. >>> >>> Gerry >>> >>> >>>> On 13 Oct 2015, at 03:38, Spencer >>> Cheng <spencer at aotera.org> wrote: >>>> >>>> Apple has abandoned Aperture. Adobe >>> seems to have major issues with LR >>> according to many of you. >>>> >>>> I am in >>> the midst of deciding what to use instead of Aperture. Apple?s >>> Photos is too >>> minimal for me as a image management package. >>>> >>>> What software should I >>> be considering instead? >>>> >>>> Regards, >>>> Spencer >>>> >>>> >>>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>>> Leica Users Group. >>>> See >>> http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information >>> >>> >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> Leica Users Group. >>> See >>> http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information >>> >> >> >> >> -- >> // >>> richard <http://www.richardmanphoto.com> >> // >>> http://facebook.com/richardmanphoto >> // >>> https://instagram.com/richardmanphoto >> >> _______________________________________ >>> ________ >> Leica Users Group. >> See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug >>> for more information >> >> >> >> >> -- >> Mark William Rabiner >> Photographer >> http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/lugalrabs/ >> >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Leica Users Group. >> See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information > > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information -- Mark William Rabiner Photographer http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/lugalrabs/