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Réalisation d'un triptyque dans Lightroom. How to make photo collages | Make a photo collage. Last week I gave a tutorial on adding type and watermarks to photos in Lightroom. But did you know that you could also make diptychs, triptychs and collages in Lightroom? The method is not the most obvious, as it’s more geared toward creating printed pictures but you CAN do it, which gives you more creative ways to display images on the web. Plus it saves you from leaving Lightroom and opening up another program (or using a website like PicMonkey) to create collaged images. The process isn’t difficult but it might seem a bit confusing at first.

However, once you set it up, I’ll also show you have to save your settings so you can just pull the template up and make the diptych without having to start from scratch all over again every time. To create a diptych, the first thing you need is edit the photos you want to use in the diptych. Underneath the Image Setting is the Rulers, Grid & Guides section. Skip down to the bottom Print Job section next (the last option at the bottom). Cadre photo. Book to iPad via Blurb – Lightroom Solutions – John Beardsworth. On Blurb’s site, go to Your Blurb > Your Books For a while Blurb’s site has let you convert books created with their BookSmart software into eBooks for the iPad. That wasn’t possible with books uploaded from Lightroom’s Book module, which used the PDF to Blurb method. Well, this afternoon I had left Lightroom uploading a book of my re-enactment photos and returned to it earlier this evening as I wanted to share it with some of the people depicted. It was then that I noticed that books uploaded from Lightroom now have an interesting “Enhance for iPad” button.

To use it, upload the book from Lightroom as normal, log into Blurb’s site, and go to the Your Books section. It seems to take a short while – it says up to 30 minutes for a large book – but that may have been that the connection was slow or I just happened to log on at the wrong time. And here is the book in iBooks on my iPad Every so often interesting little features sneak out without any fanfare.

Calculateur pour la visualisation et la préparation des images à imprimer. Déc 11 2011 Définition, résolution, pitch, dimensions de l'écran, taille d'impression... autant de termes et de notions qui s'entrechoquent et se mélangent, rendant délicates certaines opérations nécessaires à la préparation optimale des images pour l'impression. Le meilleur exemple est sans doute l'accentuation de sortie, qui doit être réalisée sur l'image dans ses dimensions définitives.

Mais quelles sont-elles ? Comment les déterminer ? Faut-il redimensionner l'image au plus juste ou laisser le spooler de l'imprimante exécuter cette tâche ? Comment visualiser l'effet de l'accentuation alors que l'image est bien plus grande sur écran qu'elle ne le sera une fois imprimée ? Pour pouvoir répondre à ces questions, il est impératif de comprendre le sens de chaque terme et de maîtriser les relations qui les lient.

Mode d'emploi du calculateur Le calculateur, s'il est présenté en trois parties distinctes avec autant de boutons de lancement des calculs, n'est en réalité qu'une seule entité. Video: Soft Proofing and Print Brightness in Lightroom 4. Photoshop : créer un script pour encadrer et signer ses images. Un grand classique… Petit tutorial Photoshop montrant comment réduire une image en l’accentuant finement, lui apposer une signature avec ombre portée alignée en bas à droite (quel que soit le format : portrait ou paysage !) , et en l’entourant d’un cadre noir avec liseret blanc L’image finale fera sur sa plus grande dimension 750 pixels (la limite généralement admise sur les forums photo…) et sera « prête à l’emploi » ! Le tout étant enregistré dans un script qui pourra donc être réutilisé à loisir et indéfiniment !

Débuter l’enregistrement du script La finalité étant l’automatisation (donc le gain de temps) de ces tâches, on commence par créer un nouveau script dans la palette du même nom. Mais avant cela, il faut impérativement ouvrir une image qui servira d’ »étalon » pour toutes les manipulations. Je conseille de prendre une image correspondant classiquement à celles que l’on est susceptible de « balancer » le plus souvent sur le web . Réduire l’image à la bonne dimension .

Et voilà ! How to Add a Photo Border in Lightroom. A Post By: Helen Bradley One hidden feature of the Lightroom print module is the ability to add a frame to an image. In this post I’ll show you how to add a frame to an image before exporting it as a JPEG image ready for uploading to the web or printing. In Lightroom 3 you can create an image and export it as a JPG image from the Print module – however before you set this up, it’s a good idea to create a frame to use.

I’m going to use a hand drawn border but you can use anything of your own design. Step 1 Start in a program like Photoshop and create a new image the size that you want to print from Lightroom. This is a critical step because the border image that you’re about to create cannot be resized any larger in any dimension than the Lightroom file dimensions that you plan printing to. Set the resolution of the new image as desired – I do this so it matches the resolution that I want to print from Lightroom at – so I use 300 dpi. From the Layout Style panel select Custom Package. How to Create Contact Sheets in Lightroom. Historically a contact sheet was a page of images each printed at the same size as the film negative – they were used as a reference for the images on the film roll. They were called contact sheets because the film was placed in close contact with the paper when printing them.

These days the term contact sheet loosely means an arrangement of multiple, small, same size images on a single page usually with some identifying information such as the image filename placed under the image. The purpose is to provide reference to a larger number of images. You may print them to keep or give to a client as a catalog of the images from a shoot, for example. You can create a contact sheet inside Lightroom and here’s how to do it: Select a Template Start by selecting the folder or the collection that contains the images that you want to add to the contact sheet. Launch the Print module and, from the Template Browser, select one of the contact sheet options. I chose the 5 x 8 one. Set up the Print Job.