I viewed one of the tutorials
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DbNes-yfDRE
and totally agree with David:
David Vincent-Jones schrieb am 21.06.19 um 19:37:
Gimp is your answer ... not darktable. You are looking at multi-layer
post processing rather than non-distructive processing.
darktable can't handle different layers - this is like Lightroom.
That's why he uses Photoshop to do this - or Gimp if you'r on Linux
and/or open source.
--
regards
Bernhard
https://www.bilddateien.de
Michael schrieb am 21.06.19 um 22:15:
thanks guys.
On Fri, Jun 21, 2019 at 12:42 PM Bernhard <[email protected]>
wrote:
Patrick Shanahan schrieb am 21.06.19 um 17:49:
* Michael <[email protected]> [06-21-19 11:21]:
"I thought Nathan cool was an adobe thing and I was hoping there was a
darktable equivelant."
On Fri, Jun 21, 2019 at 11:15 AM Remco Viëtor <[email protected]>
wrote:
On vendredi 21 juin 2019 16:57:16 CEST Michael wrote:
I'm trying to get into real estate photography and other r.e.p. run a
Nathan cool re bump to make their pictures perfect.
This is supposed to make sense?
never heard of "Nathan cool" and never used the "adobe thing". how would
anyone answer your question with anything sensible?
ps: if this is an example of your work ethic, might as well go to the pub
and enjoy yourself rather than worry about real estate photography or any
photography at all.
yeah, not really being nice today. enjoy
https://www.nathancoolphoto.com/
See his tutorials, then think how to adapt this to your work and tools.
That's what I would do (I take ideas from all those lightroom-guys also
and then try to figure out how this might work with my favorite tools).
--
regards
Bernhard
https://www.bilddateien.de
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