![]() The whole style of LR is IMO a little more fluid, playful and non-prescriptive than other methods are - including say Bridge / ACR workflow. unless you ARE looking for completely step by step rote instruction - working through sample exercises, Scott Kelby style - which I do not recommend as a path to learning LR. Much of the best material so far as teaching concepts, may refer to earlier versions of LR but that should not put you off too badly. These rely on portability of some concepts between ACR and LR, so can only take you part way into LR itself. ![]() Concentrating on printing in particular, the excellent "Post Exposure" (by Ctein) is available as a free download. If you prefer a book, Martin Evening is clear - also take a look at Jeff Schewe's book "the digital negative" too. On YouTube you may be lucky but there are a lot of people just pushing their own understanding and preferred workflow, rather than helping you to navigate to yours. That's at and there's a sample video you can download to get an idea whether this style of teaching is for you. ![]() He has IMO a strong talent for summarising the full depth of the software without ever dumbing things down, yet always clear and to-the-point. ![]() Those Adobe hosted videos are free, usually targeted on a given issue or feature.įor a systematic course of instruction, consider George Jardine's commercial set. So much so, it's linked from Adobe's own help system: I learnt a lot from the broad choice of videos on Adobe's site, including those by Julieanne Kost and one video in particular by George Jardine is an excellent conceptual stepping stone to push off from. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |