I am preparing a presentation for my camera club on Digital
Work Flow. I am trying to make it as simple as possible so the newbies and experienced can relate to the topic. My camera club has a broad range of members and we sometimes get so technical we are over the heads of the less experienced photographers. Any info, links or suggestions will be greatly appreciated.
Anne
Go to the top of the page, click on Search and enter digital workflow. You'll get, perhaps, more than you can use. :thumbup:
Iduno
Loc: Near Tampa Florida
Speak to the lowest level of understanding in your audience. Explain this at the beginning of your presentation and thank those more advanced for their understanding. Engage the advanced attendees with eye candy.
Anne wrote:
I am preparing a presentation for my camera club on Digital
Work Flow. I am trying to make it as simple as possible so the newbies and experienced can relate to the topic. My camera club has a broad range of members and we sometimes get so technical we are over the heads of the less experienced photographers. Any info, links or suggestions will be greatly appreciated.
Anne
Kelby puts his process at the end of his books on Elements, Lightroom, and Photoshop.
Thanks to everyone for the advice, I know what I will be doing this weekend.
Anne
In the Army we used to say
KISS
Keep It Simple Stupid
Sarge69 :thumbup: :thumbup:
I wrote this a while back on a thread I started. Did not get a lot of feedback. It works well for me.
You took a picture now what?
Do you embrace a standard PP work routine? Always do xx first, then yy, etc?
If so why the sequence you do?
I have one that consists of about 7 major steps with various sub steps depending on what I think is needed. After listening on UHH for a while I may be revising or adding to my plan. Would be nice to hear what you do & why is that sequence important if it is, if you are willing to share.
Mine is:
1. Save / protect the original copy
2. Fix any tilting / angle issues, keystoning (sp?) etc included
3. Intensity, white balance, colour issues
4. Fix composition remove people, fix blemishes, etc
5. Review sharpness
6. Crop to suit intended application
7. Save results
May sound simple but I found without a plan or routine I could chase my tail for hours.
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