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    Editing photos question

    So I am currently getting more and more into photography and I feel like I need to start focusing more on the editing part of the process since realizing how much of a role it can play in "perfect the photo". I believe I have access to light room but would have to verify.



    That being said I was curious on what major changes do y'all usually find yourselves making on photos? Or does it change depending on the photo? Any tips or tricks to editing? Helpful videos?



    I use to be a huge Snapseed fan but realized how saturated I was making my photos. I still ran a few through the app but toned down the effects quite a bit and was curious on y'alls thoughts and suggestions and if its still a usefull editing tool on the go.



    Thanks

    Before



    After




    Before (i missed on the focus a hair)




    After (I felt like I hit this one to hard and ruined the editing on it) thoughts?




    Before




    After

    Last edited by 150class; 01-23-2017, 09:55 PM.

    #2
    Editing photos question

    Was shooting with a Sony a6000 & Sony 70-200mm f4

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      #3
      Beautiful photography to get more check here.

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        #4
        Originally posted by Andrew Burton View Post
        Beautiful photography to get more check here.
        Thank you sir

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          #5
          Whether you're using a cell phone or a real camera, you really need to edit a photo to make it look its best. You can definitely do too much and ruin it too though. You just have to edit a bunch to learn what works best for you.

          I highly recommend shooting in RAW (in your big camera) and then editing with Lightroom. Lr is non-destructive, meaning that your edits don't affect your original RAW image. That never changes, so you can go back and redo the edit from the original without losing any detail or quality. RAW files also have all the detail that your camera captured, while JPEGs are compressed. Compressed means that some of the pixels were thrown away, so you lose a little of the original detail in the process.

          If you want to get serious about it, spend the money on Lr. It's worth it. Very easy to use once you get familiar with it.

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            #6
            Originally posted by Shane View Post
            Whether you're using a cell phone or a real camera, you really need to edit a photo to make it look its best. You can definitely do too much and ruin it too though. You just have to edit a bunch to learn what works best for you.

            I highly recommend shooting in RAW (in your big camera) and then editing with Lightroom. Lr is non-destructive, meaning that your edits don't affect your original RAW image. That never changes, so you can go back and redo the edit from the original without losing any detail or quality. RAW files also have all the detail that your camera captured, while JPEGs are compressed. Compressed means that some of the pixels were thrown away, so you lose a little of the original detail in the process.

            If you want to get serious about it, spend the money on Lr. It's worth it. Very easy to use once you get familiar with it.
            Just what I was hoping to hear!

            And I confirmed that the fiancé does use Light Room so I will have acces to that editing tool.

            I figured it would a a practice makes perfect and appreciate the input sir

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              #7
              There's all kinds of how-to stuff on YouTube and elsewhere to help you with Lr. More than you'll ever need to know.

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                #8
                Originally posted by Shane View Post
                Whether you're using a cell phone or a real camera, you really need to edit a photo to make it look its best. You can definitely do too much and ruin it too though. You just have to edit a bunch to learn what works best for you.



                I highly recommend shooting in RAW (in your big camera) and then editing with Lightroom. Lr is non-destructive, meaning that your edits don't affect your original RAW image. That never changes, so you can go back and redo the edit from the original without losing any detail or quality. RAW files also have all the detail that your camera captured, while JPEGs are compressed. Compressed means that some of the pixels were thrown away, so you lose a little of the original detail in the process.



                If you want to get serious about it, spend the money on Lr. It's worth it. Very easy to use once you get familiar with it.


                This^^^

                I recently discovered the Nik software/plugin collection (free download) that pairs with LR and photoshop, and so far it appears to be quite useful.


                Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

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                  #9
                  I agree with Shane. At some point, you will probably find yourself repeating the same editing over and over. That's where Lr custom presets come in handy. You'll eventually develop a collection of your own presets and have a pretty good idea when to use each (although experimentation is sometimes needed). I am learning more about Lr all the time. And the more I learn, the more time I save. But I'm pretty sure there's still a whole iceburg that I have yet to discover.

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                    #10
                    Messed around in light room some for a few quick edits I observed watching a few YouTube tutorials.

                    I know everyone builds/developed their own taste when it comes to edits but would like to hear any suggestions or thoughts! Thank you.








                    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

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                      #11
                      Looks like you got the hang of it quickly. Photos look great!

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                        #12
                        Wonderful. What photo retouching did you use?

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                          #13
                          Looks like you’re getting the hang of it. Lightroom and Nik are awesome and help speed up your workflow immensely. The next step would be learning the ins and outs of Photoshop, which allows you to really fine tune some things.

                          The best advice I can give you or anyone starting out with LR is to not overtweak any of the settings in Lightroom. I always set them to what I think looks best, then let off by 10% or so.

                          Checkout this site. It’s got a ton of useful tutorials and their online courses are awesome if your willing to spend $200 on them.

                          The pics look good. Keep em comming.

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                            #14
                            editing makes such a big difference!

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