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Adobe Photoshop Lightroom Bio 498/698

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Adobe Photoshop Lightroom. Bio 498/698. Lecture Outline. Review Lightroom components Key commands and shortcuts Importing files Operating Lightroom. Review: Opening Lightroom. On far left side of keyboard press: M2 = Lightroom. Lightroom-Module Picker. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom

Adobe Photoshop LightroomBio 498/698

Page 2: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom

Lecture OutlineReviewLightroom componentsKey commands and shortcutsImporting filesOperating Lightroom

Page 3: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom

Review: Opening LightroomOn far left side of keyboard press:

M2 = Lightroom

Page 4: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom

Lightroom-Module PickerModule picker is located at top right of the

windowModules – Library, Develop, Slideshow, Print,

and WebAny of the 5 Modules provides tools necessary

for that taskModules

Page 5: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom

Lightroom-PanelsYou control the modules using the panelsPanels - located on the left and right sides of

the Lightroom windowLeft Panel – Content and preset browsersRight Panel – Tools needed to accomplish

tasks

Left Panel Right

Panel

Page 6: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom

Lightroom-FilmstripAllows navigation of photosView of current photos in LibraryOther modules use the photos as source

material for tasks

Filmstrip

Page 7: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom

Lightroom Key CommandsTab: Hide and show side panelsShift+Tab: Hide and show all panelsF: Cycle full screen modeL: Dim the lights`: Flag the selected photo(s)Ctrl+/: Module-specific shortcutsCtrl+a: Select all

Page 8: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom

Lightroom-Library Shortcuts (Ctrl+/)

Page 9: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom

Lightroom-Develop Shortcuts (Ctrl+/)

Page 10: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom

Lightroom usage for Bio 498/698The 2 main modules used will be Library and

DevelopLibrary: Import and organize filesDevelop: Review and evaluate the overall

tonality of your image

Page 11: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom

Lightroom-Importing filesImporting from a cardFor class purposes: pictures will

automatically show up in Lightroom when taken using the Camlift

Page 12: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom

Using the HistogramWhile looking at the image and using your own

judgment is important using the Histogram can help optimize the image quality.

A histogram evaluates the tonality of an imageIf the histogram is skewed towards the left, the image

is (likely) underexposed/too dark. If the histogram is skewed towards the right, the

image is (likely) overexposed/too light. A centered histogram is usually good, but note that a

specimen on a white background will likely skew the histogram to the right, black background skews left, etc.

http://www.adobe.com/designcenter-archive/lightroom/articles/lir1at_histogram_print.html

Page 13: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom

Develop: Using the Histogram

For optimal lighting, the tonality should fall between the two lines indicated by yellow in the Histogram

Page 14: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom

Operating LightroomThe Develop module is used to determine the

proper lighting for a set of photos

This picture is overexposed – too much image data displays as pure white.

In Develop: when a picture is overexposed, in the Histogram, click the top right arrow. The over-exposed parts will show up as red.

Histogram

Over-exposure indicator

Page 15: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom

Operating LightroomBy clicking the top left arrow in the

Histogram, any areas that are underexposed will show up as blue.

Underexposed – there is literally no image data here, so it gets displayed as pure black.

Under-exposure indicator

Page 16: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom

Operating Lightroom

*Notice that as the image appears lighter in the second image, the exposure indicator in the histogram moves further to the right.

Page 17: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom

Operating LightroomAfter image slices have been taken, the entire

set will appear in the filmstrip.Note: When viewing pictures, either the Library or Develop modules can be used

Image slices on filmstrip

Page 18: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom

Operating LightroomSometimes the last photo will have been

overshot. This makes the lowest in-focus point be in better focus in the second to last photo. Simply delete the last photo from Lightroom

Second to last photo Last photo

In-focus

Not in-focus

Page 19: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom

Lightroom: Deleting Images• To delete an image, on the filmstrip, right click the

desired image, and select ‘Delete Photo’. When prompted, select ‘Delete from Disk’.

• To delete all photos on filmstrip, press (Ctrl+a) to select all photos and follow previous instructions. To only select a consecutive group, shift-click the first image and the last image. You can also ctrl-click individual images to make a non-consecutive selection.

Page 20: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom

Lightroom: Exporting ImagesStep 1: Select all the images you wish to use

for stacking (generally ctrl-A to select all)Step 2:

Library or Develop- right click on any image on the filmstrip, and select export

Library or Develop-File>ExportLibrary- In the left panel, select the ‘Export…’

button

Page 21: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom

Lightroom: Exporting Images

Page 22: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom

Lightroom: Exporting Images

Step 3: In selecting a folder to export images to, click the ‘Choose…’ button

Step 4: For this class, export all images to the: ‘Primary Image Drive (D:)> Lightroom Catalogs> Imaging_Class_Spring12> Your folder> Specific specimen folder’

Page 23: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom

Lightroom: Exporting ImagesStep 5: Under ‘Export Location’, if needed, select ‘put in subfolder’ and name that folder

Step 6: Under ‘File Naming’, for ‘Custom Text’, the name should include: CatalogNumber_Lens_Magnification(ex. Gewa23811_100mm_1to1.5) Step 7: Under ‘File Settings’, for ‘Format’ select TIFF. For ‘Bit Depth’ select 8 bits/component

Step 8: Click ‘Export’

Page 24: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom

Lightroom

When finished exporting, delete all of your images from the filmstrip. Be careful not to delete other people’s images, only yours!

Page 25: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom

Additional InformationIf you wish to learn more about Lightroom,

go to http://help.adobe.com/en_US/Lightroom/3.0/Using/index.html