I agree.
Okay. I have knowledge of Lightroom myself and think that usability is
the strong point. But I'm getting used to Darktable and since the mask
and multiple instance function, I'm starting to really enjoy
the software. So I have stopped using Lightroom. :)
)-|algeir
Den 13. mai 2013 17:11, skrev Jiew Peng Lim:
However, if the devs say that rearranging the modules will break basic
DT principles, then I suppose we'll just have to get used to it.
Sometimes it really isn't as simple as we users hope it would be.
On 13 May 2013 23:07, Jiew Peng Lim <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Hi
In Lightroom, all the processing stuff are on the right side of
the screen, as in Darktable. I shall list them from top to bottom.
Right at the top you have the RGB histogram. You can change the
exposure levels of the shadows, highlights and midtones by
dragging along the histogram.
Below the histogram are stuff that are used in any point of a
photographer's workflow. They also have shortcut keys to access
them. These tools include crop and straighten, spot removal (with
option for cloning or healing), red eye reduction, graduated
filter that can adjust just about any parameter found in the basic
panel and lastly an adjustment brush that does the same stuff that
the graduated filter does, in a brush form.
Below that is a basic panel, which nests the most frequently used
adjustments.
-Treatment: Colour or grayscale
-WB picker and presets
-Temperature and tint
-Exposure
-Highlight Recovery
-Fill Light/Shadow Recovery
-Blacks
-Brightness
-Contrast
-Clarity/Local contrast
-Vibrance
-Saturation
After that is the Tone Curve panel, with sliders to adjust black
levels and stuff. Also has preset curves that you can apply. This
is only a RGB curve, not the LAB curve found in DT nightlies
Following that you have the HSL panel, which is the colour zones
module in DT
Then you have a Split Toning panel which is pretty self explanatory
Then you have a Detail panel which does sharpening, noise
reduction and CA adjustments
After which you have a lens corrections panel in which you can
apply profile corrections as well as manual lens corrections like
perspective correction, CA, barrel/pincushion distortion etc.
Following that is the Effects panel which does Post-crop
vignetting or add grain to your images
Then you have Camera Calibration which I don't use much unless I
want to use a camera preset. It can also shift colour values and
things like that but I don't understand it enough to use it.
So there you go. You might have a better idea if you try Googling
for screenshots of Lightroom. Basically what we're trying to get
at here is that Lightroom is a program with a UI that just makes
sense. Everything is in the order that you would adjust them, and
stuff that are not in any order are separated (crop, spot removal,
GND etc)
2013/5/13 Marie-Noëlle Augendre <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>>
Philippe, could you elaborate a bit, please?
I (and possibly others in this mailing-list) have no idea what
Lightroom's order is, as I've never used that software.
Remember, I'm a Linux woman now. ;-)
Marie-Noëlle
2013/5/13 DELETREE Philippe <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>>
Philippe DELETREE
--
<http://www.marie-noelle-augendre.com/photos/>
Mes dernières photos sont dans ma galerie
<http://www.marie-noelle-augendre.com/photos/>.
Connaissez-vous Image Fixe <http://image-fixe.org>, le
photo-club de Saint Jean du Gard ?
Et parcourez les Cévennes à ma façon avec Cévennes Plurielles
<http://www.cevennes-plurielles.com/>,
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