adobe photoshop lightroom

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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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Adobe Photoshop LightroomBio 498/698

Lecture OutlineReviewLightroom componentsKey commands and shortcutsImporting filesOperating Lightroom

Review: Opening LightroomOn far left side of keyboard press:

M2 = 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

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

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

material for tasks

Filmstrip

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

Lightroom-Library Shortcuts (Ctrl+/)

Lightroom-Develop Shortcuts (Ctrl+/)

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

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

automatically show up in Lightroom when taken using the Camlift

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

Develop: Using the Histogram

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

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

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

Operating Lightroom

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

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

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

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.

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

Lightroom: Exporting Images

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’

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’

Lightroom

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

Additional InformationIf you wish to learn more about Lightroom,

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

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