Do you bracket your exposure when you shoot? Do you always bracket or just sometimes? Here’s a tutorial from Nick page that will explain when you should bracket and when it just doesn’t make any sense.
There will some a time in every photographers’ life when it becomes necessary to remove the background from a
photograph. Here’s a tutorial from Aaron Nace, the photographer behind Plearn, on quick ways to get that job done.
(673) Photoshop’s 5 Most Powerful Selection Tools – YouTube
Blake Rudis of f64 Academy used to call his web channel Everyday HDR. HDR as it was done 10 years ago has gone out of favor, but the need for expanding the dynamic range of our photographs is still there. Our eyes can see a much greater dynamic range than our cameras can capture. Fortunately, we’ve learned much subtler ways to accomplish. In this tutorial, Blake is teaching us a way to do it in the develop module of Lightroom or in Adobe Camera Raw in Photoshop.
HDR Processing in 2020 – f64 Academy
Here’s a 1-minute tutorial from Colin Smith of Photoshop Cafe on Color grading with gradient maps.
(673) Instant High-end color grade in Photoshop with gradient Maps #Shorts – YouTube
If you watched the presentation from Tim Grey at our January virtual meeting you saw how he moved back and forth between Lightroom and Photoshop. Here is a tutorial from Colin Smith showing in detail how to move back and forth with both a video and written instructions that should clear up any questions you may have had since Tim’s not around to answer questions anymore.
How to Open Photos from Lightroom in Photoshop – PhotoshopCAFE
Well get a little technical for this one, Greg Benz goes through the Photoshop color settings explaining what each of them does and which one’s are the best to use.
How to Optimize Color Settings in Photoshop (gregbenzphotography.com)
And were never complete without our friend Unmesh Dinda of Piximperfect. Here we have an absolute fun one. Those of you who have set up a smart house using the Amazon Echo or Google can appreciate this one. Personally, I turn on my office lights, set timers, set alarms and tell my TV what show I want it to play. (A long way from having to get up from the couch and walking over to the TV and changing the channel.) Unmesh is demonstrating a free program called Voice Attack that will let you give voice commands to Photoshop. Imagine saying Duplicate (duplicate a layer), Mask (add a mask), Black Mask (add a black mask), Save (save your image). Unmesh even gives us some free actions that will soften skin of remove a background that you can get the program to execute by voice command.
(673) Voice Commands in Photoshop? Hell Yeah! – YouTube