However, if the devs say that rearranging the modules will break basic DT
principles, then I suppose we'll just have to get used to it. Sometimes it
really isn't as simple as we users hope it would be.
On 13 May 2013 23:07, Jiew Peng Lim <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi
>
> In Lightroom, all the processing stuff are on the right side of the
> screen, as in Darktable. I shall list them from top to bottom.
>
> Right at the top you have the RGB histogram. You can change the exposure
> levels of the shadows, highlights and midtones by dragging along the
> histogram.
>
> Below the histogram are stuff that are used in any point of a
> photographer's workflow. They also have shortcut keys to access them. These
> tools include crop and straighten, spot removal (with option for cloning or
> healing), red eye reduction, graduated filter that can adjust just about
> any parameter found in the basic panel and lastly an adjustment brush that
> does the same stuff that the graduated filter does, in a brush form.
>
> Below that is a basic panel, which nests the most frequently used
> adjustments.
> -Treatment: Colour or grayscale
> -WB picker and presets
> -Temperature and tint
> -Exposure
> -Highlight Recovery
> -Fill Light/Shadow Recovery
> -Blacks
> -Brightness
> -Contrast
> -Clarity/Local contrast
> -Vibrance
> -Saturation
>
> After that is the Tone Curve panel, with sliders to adjust black levels
> and stuff. Also has preset curves that you can apply. This is only a RGB
> curve, not the LAB curve found in DT nightlies
>
> Following that you have the HSL panel, which is the colour zones module in
> DT
>
> Then you have a Split Toning panel which is pretty self explanatory
>
> Then you have a Detail panel which does sharpening, noise reduction and CA
> adjustments
>
> After which you have a lens corrections panel in which you can apply
> profile corrections as well as manual lens corrections like perspective
> correction, CA, barrel/pincushion distortion etc.
>
> Following that is the Effects panel which does Post-crop vignetting or add
> grain to your images
>
> Then you have Camera Calibration which I don't use much unless I want to
> use a camera preset. It can also shift colour values and things like that
> but I don't understand it enough to use it.
>
> So there you go. You might have a better idea if you try Googling for
> screenshots of Lightroom. Basically what we're trying to get at here is
> that Lightroom is a program with a UI that just makes sense. Everything is
> in the order that you would adjust them, and stuff that are not in any
> order are separated (crop, spot removal, GND etc)
>
>
> 2013/5/13 Marie-Noëlle Augendre <[email protected]>
>
>> Philippe, could you elaborate a bit, please?
>>
>> I (and possibly others in this mailing-list) have no idea what
>> Lightroom's order is, as I've never used that software. Remember, I'm a
>> Linux woman now. ;-)
>>
>> Marie-Noëlle
>>
>>
>> 2013/5/13 DELETREE Philippe <[email protected]>
>>
>>> Philippe DELETREE
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>> --
>> <http://www.marie-noelle-augendre.com/photos/>
>>
>> Mes dernières photos sont dans ma
>> galerie<http://www.marie-noelle-augendre.com/photos/>
>> .
>> Connaissez-vous Image Fixe <http://image-fixe.org>, le photo-club de
>> Saint Jean du Gard ?
>> Et parcourez les Cévennes à ma façon avec Cévennes
>> Plurielles<http://www.cevennes-plurielles.com/>,
>>
>>
>>
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>
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leaders in the field. The early access version is available now.
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