3. CustomizeYour Lightroom
Now you can give a face lift of
Lightroom , you can edit your grid,
how the program handles your files
and you can also choose the
program that you want to edit your
photos from Lightroom
Changing your Identity Plate
Changing your grid
file information displayed
Choosing your outside editor
4. Customizing Lightroom Faceplate
You can customize your face plate
with font and logos if you like
Go to Edit and then open Identity
Plate set up
5. Grid Options
You can have a customized grid to
line up your photos
Go to View Loupe Overlay then
select grid hold control down to
adjust gird
6. File Information Displayed
You can have a customized the file
information you want displayed
Click on View then view options to
select the info you want displayed
7. CustomizingYour Outside Editor
You can change the program that
you want to use as your outside
editor
Click on Preferences then the
external editing tab
8.
9. Customize your photoshop workspace
As you know there are so many
panels in photoshop your work
space can become cluttered. You
can use the workspaces provided or
you can use your own work space
Photoshop Workspaces
Personal Work Space
Loading Actions
Recording Actions
10. Photo Workspaces
Now since Photoshop has become
so powerful they break out the work
spaces to Photography, 3D, Motion
,Painting and Typography
11. Personal Workspaces
Everyone’s work flow is different so
you will have different windows and
such open. The best thing to do is to
open the windows you use most and
then save it as a new work space. So
when photoshop opens you can be
working in the environment that is
most contusive to your work flow.
13. Recording Actions
Open a file.
You can record your own Actions
with a few easy steps
In the Actions panel, click the Create
New Action button , or choose New
Action from the Actions panel menu.
Enter an action name, select an action
set, and set additional options:Function
Key Assigns a keyboard shortcut to the
action. You can choose any combination
of a function key, the Ctrl key (Windows)
or Command key (Mac OS), and the Shift
key (for example, Ctrl+Shift+F3), with
these exceptions: In Windows, you
cannot use the F1 key, nor can you use
F4 or F6 with the Ctrl key.Note: If you
assign an action the same shortcut that is
used for a command, the shortcut will
apply the action rather than the
command.
14. Recording Actions
You can record your own Actions
with a few easy steps
Click Begin Recording. The Begin
Recording button in the Actions
panel turns red .Important: When
recording the Save As command, do
not change the filename. If you enter
a new filename, that new name is
recorded and used each time you run
the action. Before saving, if you
navigate to a different folder, you can
specify a different location without
having to specify a filename.
15. Recording Actions
You can record your own Actions
with a few easy steps
Perform the operations and
commands you want to record.Not
all tasks in actions can be recorded
directly; however, you can insert
most nonrecordable tasks using
commands in the Actions panel
menu.
To stop recording, either click the
Stop Playing/Recording button, or
choose Stop Recording from the
Actions panel menu. (In Photoshop,
you can also press the Esc key.)
16. Lightroom Presets and Automation
Presets a group of recorded edits to
a file. You can record repetitive edits
and save them to use later. There
are many 3rd party actions that you
can load to Lightroom that can help
you stream line your time and
editing. Also you can record your
actions to use later and to apply over
many files at once
Presets
Making a Preset
Loading a Preset
Automaton
17. Making a Preset
Presets you create are based on the
current settings of the selected
photo.
•In the Develop module, click the
Create New Preset (+) button at the
top of the Presets panel or choose
Develop > New Preset.
•Click Check All to select everything
or click Check None to deselect
everything, and then click to select
each of the settings to include in the
preset.
•Type a name in the Preset Name
box, specify which folder the preset
should appear in, and click Create.
The preset is added to the list in the
Presets panel in the specified folder.
19. Loading and Exporting a Preset
Import
To import a preset, right-click
(Windows) or Control-click
(Mac OS) the area where you
want the preset to appear and
choose Import. Double-click
the preset template file.
Export
You can export presets you’ve
created to share with
colleagues or to use on a
different computer. Preset
templates are saved with an
.lrtemplate extension.
To export a preset, right-click
(Windows) or Control-click
(Mac OS) a preset and choose
Export. Type the name of the
preset template file and click
Save.
20. Loading and Exporting a Preset
Import
To import a preset, right-click
(Windows) or Control-click
(Mac OS) the area where you
want the preset to appear and
choose Import. Double-click
the preset template file.
Export
You can export presets you’ve
created to share with
colleagues or to use on a
different computer. Preset
templates are saved with an
.lrtemplate extension.
To export a preset, right-click
(Windows) or Control-click
(Mac OS) a preset and choose
Export. Type the name of the
preset template file and click
Save.
21.
22. File Handling and Saving Presets
When working from one
program to another you can
customize how you it handles
your file and how it names
them when you export
23. HDR Files in Photoshop
To do HDR files you need to
have several photos with the
different exposures to take
advantage of the all features
in HDR Pro
25. You Can Bring in Multiple Files as Layers
Now you can select more than
one photo from lightroom and
take it to Photoshop and make
a composite image