Adobe’s Photoshop Lightroom 1.0; Should Photo Enthusiasts Embrace Adobe’s Lightroom?
When a photo product is designated as "professional" by the manufacturer
many serious photo enthusiasts are immediately attracted, assuming the product
will provide superior performance for them as well as professional photographers.
This assumption has for much of photography's recent history been a truism
backed up by reality. However, Adobe's reference to Lightroom as an application
designed for professionals isn't so much a matter of higher performance
as it is with specific functions that allow professional photographers to operate
their businesses more efficiently. Does that preclude it from consideration
by serious photo enthusiasts using a digital camera and saving in raw format?
Not at all--indeed, any photographer who is prolific will also benefit
from Lightroom's functions and capabilities.
This
approach is probably best understood by describing a couple of Lightroom's
key attributes and functions. Anyone familiar with dealing with raw digital
camera files knows that there is an essential and to some extent time-consuming
process of conversion from the proprietary raw camera file to a format that
can be edited in an application like Photoshop. Lightroom provides much faster
access to a useful image by nondestructively sampling the file. This provides
both a thumbnail as well as a large-screen resolution preview that can be edited
and adjusted; those changes are recorded in a data file that is linked to the
original raw format file, but does not alter its content.
The other initial function of Lightroom is actually supported by a database
engine. This provides several different functions that allow sorting and rating
or classifying the content of a shoot. This is a virtual, digital simulation
of the old analog film process of getting boxes of processed slides from the
lab and spreading them out on a light table to go through them with a loupe
in hand, tossing the culls in the round file and picking the keepers.
This sorting and culling process is very efficient. It can be done as "stacks,"
different images made within a short time span that's set by the user.
It has a rating number that can be applied to the thumbnail frames. And you
can easily delete the thumbnail of a cull or even the original raw file. Of
course, each shoot can be further and arbitrarily divided and easily put into
named folders within the Lightroom Library.
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After sorting a photographer can click on the Develop tab at the top of the
screen. At this point color corrections and adjustments to any image selected
from the thumbnails can be made using a largely familiar set of adjustment sliders,
which closely parallel those of Camera Raw in Photoshop CS2 or Elements. Develop
is made easier and more effective by providing graphic feedback in the form
of histograms and a new Curves dialog that is easier to control. The interactive
sliders and a more refined feedback graph, which indicates the range of adjustment
possible while preserving image integrity, are both welcome additions. Develop
even has a black and white/monochrome conversion utility, providing selective
color control quite similar to what is in the recent release of Photoshop CS3.
Any set of adjustments can be saved and then easily applied to a selection of
thumbnails, a very efficient form of batch processing.
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