tips on getting started shooting in raw?

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neuroanatomist said:
JR said:
...select the picture with the right white balance in LR, you can then at the bottom of the screen, press the shift key and select all the picture you want the change to be applied. Then on the lower right of the screen press the sync button. A pop-up screen will appear asking you which feature you want to apply to all your picture. Simply select the white balance and then clic synchronize again.

This is the fastest way.

Sorry forgot to mention you need to be in the Develop mode in LR for this to work.

Wow...is it just me, or does:

neuroanatomist said:
select all the relevant images, click on the WB eyedropper tool, click on the gray card in one of the images, and done

...sound a whole lot easier? I really hope there's an easier way to do it in LR, else from a workflow standpoint alone I'm glad I use DxO!
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Hmmm...sounds a little easier. Although from a practical point, in LR if you are working on images you should be in Develop mode (Vs. Library, Slideshow, Print) so that's really not a step. The only extra step really from what you describe is pressing sync and ensuring you are syncing WB only if that's all you want to do, as you can sync about 25-30 things (sorry I don't have LR on the PC I'm using to confirm the number). As far as the sync step goes, it takes a second or two and then the whole batch is done, like most tech things, it sounds difficult when you detail it step by step, but is easy in execution.
 
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cheeseheadsaint said:
Wow thank you for all your replies! =D But I don't think I am going to be buying new software at this point. Between Photoshop Elements 7.0 and DPP which is better for raw processing? haven't installed DPP yet..

Just try them both. Install DPP and get to work. Run the same file through both PS E 7.0 and DPP and check the results. DPP is known to be good for skintones. Sometimes if I have a troublesome file in LR I'll pull it into DPP and get a good result. There's absolutely no doubt DPP does great conversions but while the GUI looks cool it is really pretty clunky to use on bigger projects. Do a Google search for Canon DPP Tutorial.

I've never used PS E 7.0 but quite likely it's the same processing engine as ACR in Photoshop CS5 which is also the same processing engine as Lightroom.

You have got a lot of brilliant information on this thread...now it's time to fire up and get to work. Let us know how you go.

Paul Wright
 
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pwp said:
There's absolutely no doubt DPP does great conversions but while the GUI looks cool it is really pretty clunky to use on bigger projects. Do a Google search for Canon DPP Tutorial.

I've never used PS E 7.0 but quite likely it's the same processing engine as ACR in Photoshop CS5 which is also the same processing engine as Lightroom.

I definitely agree that DPP is clunky. I think what i dislike the most is the modularity - a tool for cropping/rotation, a different tool for cloning/stamp - I want to work on one image then move on, not crop all my images, then adjust all my exposures, etc.

IIRC, the version of ACR for PSE lacks some of the features and adjustments of the 'full' version run with CS or LR.
 
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neuroanatomist said:
IIRC, the version of ACR for PSE lacks some of the features and adjustments of the 'full' version run with CS or LR.

Plus the version of ACR available in PSE7 is limited to several version back. PSE8 and above supports the latest ACR version which purportedly has better NR.
 
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Not sure if its been mentioned, but spare memory cards AND constant reviewing of your images will help...
If you've got a shot thats out of focus, badly exposed (and theres nothing in it), delete it, free up your space...

Also, format the card before each shoot. I actually format after I transfer, and before I start shooting - just to be sure.
 
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