Mastering Lightroom Slideshows and Web Galleries. Lightroom isn't just great for professional photo editing - it also has many great options for showing off your photos to clients, friends or family.
Whether you want to sit someone down in front of your computer and play them a slideshow or create an impressive interactive web gallery, Lightroom has the tools to help you, no experience necessary. Below we'll walk through the basics of setting up both custom slideshows and web galleries in Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 3. Though much of the process is straightforward, there are plenty of advanced settings to get lost in. Let's get started! Slideshows Slideshows are one of the absolute best ways to show off your photos to a client. Selecting the Slideshow Photos The first step for setting up a slideshow in Lightroom is to choose the photos you want to include. The easiest and most flexible way to decide what goes into a slideshow is to first set up a collection.
Once you have a collection, all you need to do is drag photos into it. Playback. How do I move Lightroom to a new computer? There’s an updated Lightroom 4/5 version of this post It’s a question that comes up over and over again, because people expect it to be complicated.
It’s not really! Even moving Windows to Mac is a straightforward operation. First, a bit of preparation will go a long towards preventing headaches… Make sure your regular backups are up to date.Set Lightroom’s folder panel to show just a few top level folders, to make it easy to relink them if they get confused in the move. Now we’re ready to move. If you’re switching from Windows to Mac in the move, remember that OS X can’t natively write to a NTFS formatted drive, so either format as FAT32, or remember you’ll need to copy the data off and reformat again once you’ve finished moving. You’ll want to transfer all of your presets, which are entirely cross-platform, over to the new computer, and possibly your preferences file too, if you’re moving Windows to Windows or Mac to Mac. Option 1 – move and relink You’re all set!
Photography and post-processing tutorials from beginner to advanced. Create Beautiful, Warm Photos With Split Toning. For many subjects, whether landscapes or portraits, warm tones make a photograph look inviting.
The white balance setting is the obvious way to make an image look warm or cool, but the split toning function in Lightoom is a pretty nifty way to create warm images too, especially if you want to apply this look to a batch of images having various white balance settings. Final Image Preview In the next few minutes I’ll show you how to warm up a portrait image, but this technique can be applied to any subject. Why Split Toning? Increasing the temperature of the white point of an image is a great way to quickly give an image warmth. Answer A: Because it gives an effect different and more flexible than increasing the temperature of the white point.
Answer B: Because it allows you to apply the warming effect to multiple images by copying the split tone settings. Step 1. Before warming our sample image, I will first make basic adjustments to the overall contrast, saturation and white balance.