Brent Cook
Forum Replies Created
-
The D5300 is one of the supported cameras for the Ninja Star, so yes, it should record as long as there’s space on the card. The record time limit is only for internal camera recording. Using a field recorder the camera is only sending the signal out and it will do so as long the camera battery lasts.
-
[Bruce Taylor] “it stays very blurred out and then on last keyframe it just ‘pops’ into focus. “
Sounds like your blur keyframe interpolation might be set to exponential instead of something like linear or bezier.
-
[Bill Davis] “But it’s internal semi round trip link to Photoshop (the return file shows up as a separate tiff alongside the unretouched original) is a good indication that Adobe did not try to make it anywhere near a full fledged photo editor.”
Dennis already addressed this, but I’ll add my .02. Lightroom is a RAW image processor and organizer. It’s not intended at all to be a full fledged photo editor. Why would it when there is photoshop? RAW processor means that it only writes a set of instructions for processing the data. Only when you export a jpg or tiff does it bake those edits into the final output. When you send a file to PS for more advanced editing/retouching, PS is actually altering the pixels and/or adding layers which are outside the scope of a RAW image processor. It wouldn’t make sense to replace your digital negative with a tiff or psd file, which is why it is added along side the RAW file. I wouldn’t have it any other way.
[Bill Davis] “Then it has a basic suite of touch up tools to let you quickly enhance and repair your selected raw files.”
Maybe you haven’t used a recent version of LR. It has quite a huge selection of powerful editing tools. The spot healing tool now works like the tool in PS (you can paint in your healing edit instead of just a single round spot), it has graduated/radial filters, adjustment brush (which was huge for me), and over the years the array of color/tonal tools, sharpening, noise reduction, have been improved a ton. I do 90+% of my photo editing in LR. I’ve been using it since the original beta version.
-
[Mitch Ives] “Jeez, is anybody doing any research?”
Was this necessary? You replied to my same comment respectfully and then this? I’ve looked at 5 or 6 other sources (first page of google search and what I would not consider rumor sights) and it is not mentioned in any of them yet you claim it’s mentioned everywhere. Maybe google works differently for each of us.
-
I’m not familiar with that site, but it does say it there. Thanks.
-
I don’t see it mentioned there, except by someone in the comments.
-
Why else would Apple work with Adobe to transition you over to Lightroom
I don’t see this mentioned anywhere else and I’m sure if it were included in Apple’s statement it would be mentioned everywhere. I’d be surprised if Apple helped users switch to an Adobe product, especially if their intent is to have this Photos app eventually be used by professionals
-
I’m not an expert in any way and don’t know standard practices of audio for TV, but I do have audio recording experience. If your mix isn’t clipping on an accurate meter and it distorts on a cheap TV’s speakers with the volume cranked, isn’t that a shortcoming of the TV? Does it make sense to “dumb down” your audio to sound good (not distorted) on crappy TV speakers at full volume?
I’m interested to hear what the experts say…
-
Jonathan, this is the guy that makes/sells cinerails. So he’s probably just looking for customer feedback and/or advertising his product here. I was intrigued by it when I first saw it. Haven’t tried it, though.
-
Here’s how I would do it: Add your crack image on a layer above the ground image. Add a levels filter and bring the white slider (on the right) under the histogram to the left just until you start to see the dark shadowy parts of the crack start to go away and dial it back a bit. Then change the blend mode of the crack layer to multiply. Here’s what it looks like. Let me know if I didn’t explain it well, and I’ll upload screen caps of the steps.
