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Sunday, December 30, 2007

Ian Lyons: Printing on Epsons with Lightroom 1.3.1 on Mac OS X Leopard

Ian Lyons has posted an excellent tutorial on printing in Leopard with Lightroom 1.3.1. He's specifically targeting the Epson range of printers using the new 6.X range of Printer Drivers.

"This tutorial will concentrate on what is known as application color management, which basically means that the ICC profile associated with a particular paper/ink combination must be selected in Lightroom rather than the print driver itself. Also, since the tutorial is intended to be useful to new and existing Lightroom users I will also include some of the basics associated with Page Setup and saving Print Templates."

Read the whole article.

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Thursday, December 27, 2007

Business Card Template for SlideShowPro

Happy New Year folks, hope the holiday season is going well. Not much of a holiday for me though, I was back working again tonight. 
As I mentioned before, SlideShowPro was released recently for Lightroom. I got a copy and I have to say I really like it. I intend doing a fuller review shortly, but I've been mucking around with it in the meantime. In the process I've created a cool little template that allows me to place my own flash galleries on sites such as MySpace.com.


Here's how it looks:











You can download the Template here.

Open the Zip file. On Mac OSX, double click on the .lrtemplate to install it. For all systems, right click on User Templates in Left Panel of the Web Module and choose "Import.." from the contextual menu. Use the File Browser to go to where the file unzipped and choose it. Remember, you must have SlideShowPro installed for this to work.

Tip: Because this is an autoplay gallery, and SSP requires the gallery to be paused for export, you need to click Export/Upload and then click to another module, eg Library.

Now to get it to work on MySpace.com you need to use the following code on your page. I have it in the sidebar on my page, but it should work anywhere:

<object type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowScriptAccess="never" allowNetworking="internal" height="200" width="300" base="." data="http://seanmcfoto.com/bc/loader.swf">
<param name="allowNetworking" value="internal" />
<param name="movie" value="http://seanmcfoto.com/bc/loader.swf" />
<param name="flashvars" value="xmlDataPath=http://www.seanmcfoto.com/bc/images.xml" />
<param name="quality" value="high" />
<param name="base" value=".">
</object>

Replace all instances of http://seanmcfoto.com/bc/ with the location of the gallery folder on your website. If you find it hard to read then use 'View Source" in your browser to look at the code producing the gallery in the middle. The code above is surrounded by XMP tags to make it viewable.

Hopefully this will be useful to others, I know I'll be redoing the galleries on my MySpace page now.

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Monday, December 24, 2007

LR/Mogrify

In an unusual move, Timothy Armes has combined the Lightroom SDK with a 3rd party imaging tool to create LR/Mogrify. Currently up to version 1.7, his Export Plugin manages to add features high in the Feature Request forums. 
  • Sharpen on Export: Check
  • Create a 2 step border: Check
  • Positionable Custom Watermark: Check
  • Convert to more than 3 Colour Spaces: Check
  • FTP after all this?: Check
Based around ImageMagick and the mogrify command, LR/Mogrify is quite a versatile output tool for Lightroom users.

Tim has full instructions on installing both ImageMagick and the LR/Mogrify plugin on the LR/Mogrify page. He's also been fulfilling a reasonable amount of user requests on it also. 
For those that find this free plugin useful, there's a donate button on the page. 

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Thursday, December 20, 2007

Picasa Web Plugin

Not content with releasing Export Plugins for Flickr, Zenfolio and Smugmug, Jeffrey Friedl has just launched the first version of his 'Export to Picasa Web' Export Plugin for Lightroom. While testing has been minimal, Jeffrey has very fast turnover on any bugs found, so there's no fear of this being an supported product. The best news for all is that, as with the other plugins, Jeffrey has released this for free.

Download the plugin and read more about it here.

The need for Speed: Quick Develop



Why would anyone want to use a tool that provides only a limited way to handle photos? Well, the answer is in the name. It’s because they want to work quickly. Quick Develop is a great tool for balancing the look of images in a hurry. The key difference between the buttons in Quick Develop and the sliders in Develop is this: Quick Develop makes Relative changes, whereas Develop makes Absolute changes. So how does this work in practice? Well, let’s say I have a few images I’m working on. Most are at 0 exposure, but let’s say I’ve already tweaked one or 2 to have +1 stop of exposure. I’m looking at all the photos and thinking I need to lighten them all a bit, including the ones I’ve already worked on. So I reach for the exposure button in Quick Develop and hit it a few times. All of the selected images will increase in exposure by 2/3 stop (each hit is 1/3 stop). If I tried that in Develop with Auto Sync on, all the images would go to 2/3 Stop, meaning the ones that were already tweaked have darkened (because they were at +1 at the start). Not so good. Quick Develop works best there.

What I love about Quick Develop is that it’s entirely visual. When you use the tools, you can only adjust by viewing the image. Sometimes in Develop we can, too often, work by looking at the numbers. As in “I shouldn’t really push this more than a stop, I’ll tweak the brightness instead”. Nah. Just get the best level visually and deal with any noise issues later in Develop. As photographers we deal with a visual medium, so we need to base our editing on what we see and perceive, rather than looking a numerics. It can happen in other fields too, like in sound mixing where you can end up looking at meters, rather than listening to the music.

So what’s the downside? Well you can’t save any Quick Develop settings into a preset.
Wouldn’t it be great if you could have relative presets? You could add or subtract any of the basic settings by a relative amount, so the current settings are the starting point of the Preset. Great!

To end here’s a Quick Develop tip: Hold down the Alt (Option on Mac) key and Clarity and Vibrance will change to Sharpening and Saturation.

This could well be the last post before Christmas, so Happy Christmas to all Christians, and Happy Holidays to everyone else! (I am in a Catholic Country here folks!)

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Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Matt's Monday Presets on Tueday

Matt Kloskowski has posted more presets this week, rather cool (or warm) sunset presets, albeit a day late.
I know, the presets usually come on Monday but I wanted to change it up this week. Actually, yesterday just got away from me. Anyway, this week I’ve got some presets for you that are specifically geared for sunsets with lots of sky. As I was looking through my photos I realized there were basically two types of sunsets - cool or warm. The cooler ones typically had lots of blues and some reds in them. The warmer ones had more of a yellowish color to them. So I made a few tweaks in White Balance as well as HSL and saved them a while back. Now whenever I have a sunset photo I usually give these a try first and I get great results most of the time. If anything, it’s a great starting point and you can always go tweak the Temperature and Tint settings under White Balance for more or less of the effect. Have at ‘em!

I've used similar presets for ages, but it's great the way he has them done as 2 levels of cool or warm.
Here's an image from yesterday that I've applied the Cool II to. (Good timing Matt!)

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Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Import by date file structure.

A recent near miss with serious data loss has me rethinking my current import by genre strategy. In a fairly recent post on Lightroom Forums.net, John Beardsworth argues for always importing by date and using metadata to create any other required structure. The background to this post by him is that I was touting a structure like Landscapes>Ireland>Connemara>Bunowen, rather than by date.

"Unless you use a strictly date-based structure, there is always the risk of your pictures either being duplicated or falling between the cracks and being controlled only in your imagination. Where, in Sean's example, would one put a shot that fits more than one category - a portrait in a bleak Connemara landscape. In bands, or in Connemara? Why not in both? Or should it depend on the size of the person relative to the landscape. A second set of considerations is reconstruction - imagine a catastrophic system failure and what makes rebuilding easier. A subject hierarchy or simple date based folders? In other words, using your folder system to analyze your work is a dead end - that's what metadata is for."

My issue began when doing some backup. Somehow the power supplies of my archive drive and the backup drive became swapped and both drives crapped out (the somehow being my own stupidity, I suspect). I surmised that perhaps the 12v and 5v lines were swapped in each (they have identical connectors) and that by swapping the drives and the caddies, I might get one working. I was right and managed to avoid serous data loss through this. Needless to say I bought a new drive immediately and backed up the photos.
Now I did have most of the stuff on DVD also, but newer stuff wasn't there because my DVD backups were monthly at the very least. Since I changed to using 2 drives for backup, I've been lazy about using this procedure. Also the Genre method makes it hard to save monthly. I'm back to importing by date now, but with one change.

I want to have my shoots in their own folder. Sometimes I might have 3 or 4 unrelated items in one day, eg portraits during the day, band promo shoot in the evening and a live gig at night. I don't want these together in one folder, so here's where a simple bit of typing can help.

Currently Lightroom only allows one set of metadata/keywords/settings at a time on Import. Because of this I tend to do multiple imports from one card if need be. So to decide my import location I now choose the 2005/December/17 style date import as per Fig 1. (I could also use 2007/12/07, but I like seeing the month name.)


Fig 1.


I then double click on the folder name that is being applied to edit it. I leave the date string intact as 2007/December/09, but I add to with a /Lights. The leading "/" forces Lightroom to create a new subfolder in the date folder. You can see the full string in Fig 2.


Fig 2.


With 2 shoots from that date imported in the same way, I have the shoots in individual, but date based folders.


Fig 3.


Of course now I need to consider how to get my older folders into this order. I have a few options: Use dates from the Metadata Browser to manually create dates and move the subfolders to these. I could simply save out all the Metadata and remove the files and reimport by date. I'd lose Virtual Copies and Collections this way though. Any option I choose forces compromise, so this will dictate the choice. As an interim option I could also simply make a date/month/subfolder option for now and add the date as time allows. I suspect the latter choice will be the easiest, with least loses.

And now John will get a chance to say 'I told you so'.

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Friday, December 07, 2007

L.ghtroom 1.3.1

L.ghtroom 1.3.1 has been published

Downloads available here: Mac, Win
As mentioned by Tom Hogarty this is a bugfix release to deal with issues introduced with Lightroom 1.3.
For more details go to Lightroom Journal