Front Burner
While I’ve posted 2 videos on Lightroom News recently, I’ve been mildly, and unintentionally, neglectful here.
I’ve a number of projects on the go taking my time. Along with tech editing a book, I’m also rewriting my own current project for all the changes since Lightroom 2 Beta came out. This stuff takes time, especially the screen captures, which I really want to have nice photos for! I was in Portumna Forest today shooting bluebells, so hopefully they’ll feature in something soon! I’ve also got an upcoming Develop article for the Professional Imagemaker (the SWPP society magazine) to write.
The new Flash based gallery is almost complete, actually it’s more than complete enough to release, but I want to add another feature first, which means learning a little more Actionscript first!
Now a few quickies:
One of my favourite photographers is Mark Tucker. For years he provided insight and wisdom on the old Rob Galbraith forums, but left before the changeover. Now those were great forums and I loved them deeply for the wealth of talent, information and community there, but I couldn’t see myself paying for them with so many free forums. Anyhow I see Mark has recently added a new gallery to his people portfolio: Mark Tucker / Little House on the Prairie. The expressions/moments he has captured are nothing short of stunning and inspirational, not to mention the sumptuous colour in his post processing (no, I don’t know what he’s using, but I know PS is involved in his texture based stuff). Enjoy.
Videos: What would you like to see next? Local corrections? Basic Beauty retouch? More short tips and tricks?
Visiting the west of Ireland? Drop me a line, I’ll be happy to give you locations to shoot, and if I’m free/out and about, I’m happy to help.
Gumroad: selling images easily
MiMedia, letting you access your media, wherever you are
Can you fix the focus on a blurry photo after the fact?
The birth of Mirrorless Cameras
Choosing your first dSLR camera
New York City can be beautiful!
The Fujifilm Finepix X10, A Review
Choosing the Right Light Stand
Photojojo iPhone Telephoto Lens review — AudioCast
My week with Q
How To Become A Successful Photographer
"When the Wind Stopped" — poem with 4 photos
Strategies for shooting action
20 Tips for Insects on Flowers
Cast aways - saving those photographic memories
One Man Show: My 25 Years With Digital Photography
Studio, Flash, & Available Light — Three Books Reviewed
Portrait styling: dangerous pairings
Adobe Photoshop CS6 Product Managers Interview Audiocast
A gift of flowers: unfold your senses
On Set of "Love & Robots" the Film
Ilford Galerie Gold Fibre Silk Inkjet Paper — Audiocast











Planning “National Geographic” style photo travel
Wilderness Travel 1 Rainforests – Essential Gear
Backlighting Basics
A Brief History Of Light & Photography: Part 3 of 3
A Brief History Of Light & Photography: Part 2 Of 3
What Moves You?
FIGURES IN MOTION: Decades of Evolving Personal Imagery in Photography, Part 7
Lomography Store, Austin, Texas — GALLERY
GALLERY — Up to $1,000 Reward for Cattle Rustlers
Taking your Portraiture Higher
The "Bible" of Time-Lapse Photography
Interview with Harold Davis — Closeup Maestro of Flowers & Water Drops
Interview with Steve Caplin — Photoshop Digital Artist, Commercial Illustrator, & Author
Easy technique to select, edit and sequence keywords for web
How much should you charge for a photograph?





























Comments
Hi I eould like to see more beuty retouch.
When you’re ready for testers for the new gallery, let me know… It’s the closest thing I’ve yet seen to what I’ve been dreaming of.
Fixing problems in pictures. The one that I am interested is how to fix pictures where water got on the lens. I was taking pictures at a waterfall and I wish I could figure out how to clean them up.
How about hidden features that affect your workflow. At the Inside Lightroom blog Michael Clark posted on just discovering the ability to set the side panels to autohide/Manual/show.Another example is the video you posted on the Detail window in LR2b. I didn’t realize the use of the TAT.
Keep up the good work!
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