Hi Moose,
Thanks for all of the helpful comments. One thing still puzzles me.
When I used PSE, on my WinXP computer, I had FM and NI installed in, I
seem to recall, the Filters tab. Now, even though I have FM and NI
installed as stand-alone programs on my computer, they don't show up in
PS or LR.
Do I have to download these programs again to get them into the Adobe
products, or is there a way to import them? I have not been able to
find a way. (This also goes for the Nik suite. I need to get them
imported, as well.)
Thanks, in advance, for any enlightenment.
Jim Nichols
Tullahoma, TN USA
On 1/25/2017 2:24 PM, Moose wrote:
On 1/25/2017 11:13 AM, Jim Nichols wrote:
I spotted this young lady changing out the incandescent bulbs and
installing LED bulbs in the Airport Terminal. I missed the focus on
the eyes, but liked the image.
You didn't miss the wonderful smile! (Had you used the X-T1 with an AF
lens and turned facial recognition on . . .)
This is my first attempt at editing an image in Photoshop. I have a
lot to learn.
http://www.gallery.leica-users.org/v/OldNick/P1116952.tif.html
When the Raw file first pops up in ACR, although the interface looks
wildly different, with the categories of tools organized in tabs,
rather than drop down menus, all the same sliders and such that you
may have been used to in PSE or LR are there and do the same things.
Basically, you can do any non-local adjustments you could do in LR -
before going on into PS. That's not how I work, but is certainly a
valid way to edit; it's how Chuck worked. Adjustments to the Highlight
and Shadow sliders are about the only thing in ACR that can't be done
later in PS, and often with more control. WB is also often easier to
do in ACR than later in PS, and those are all I personally do at that
point.
Both NeatImage and FocusMagic have plug-ins that allow them to be used
within PS, which is far smoother work flow, more convenient and should
allow the EXIF to flow through into the output files.
Application of a bit of FM after downsampling for the web is almost
always useful. FM itself only allows whole pixel radius steps.
Sometimes, (maybe often) a setting of '1' is too much, but no
sharpening too little. Applied on a duplicated top layer in PS, the
layer Opacity slider may be used for finer adjustment of the
sharpening effect.
Layered Moose
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