mmakeron.blogg.se

Fastrawviewer installationg
Fastrawviewer installationg









fastrawviewer installationg
  1. #Fastrawviewer installationg software#
  2. #Fastrawviewer installationg professional#

#Fastrawviewer installationg software#

This kind of shatters my assumptions about the software if this is the case. Wait - so are you saying that there are photos that are on your hard drive that you choose to not show up in your catalog? Like, you can do that?

#Fastrawviewer installationg professional#

I still only use color labels for my professional work (which is done in sessions, not in a catalog).įor professional work, everything I like is red, anything that will be used as layer in a composite is yellow (these would have been a stack in LR), and everything delivered to the client is green. I still use a second pass to increase the star rating as needed. Since there are no pick flags in C1, I give the picks a 1 star rating and delete the rejects. I do both personal and professional work. I deleted all the rejects and kept everything else. My workflow in LR was to use the pick and reject flags on the first pass, then use the star ratings on the second pass. You can just choose "none" for the rating in filters. Both are flexible about this.īack to my color tagging system, purple signifies unrated photos in case a few escape my attention. There are also settings in LR where you don't have to have date folders if you don't want them. There are settings in the import dialog where you can have C1 create date folders. One thing that really bothered me is how photos weren't organized into folders by date automatically like they are in LR. LR just feels so much more intuitive and simple regarding culling and organizing, but I'm beginning to get used to C1's quirks.Įven after you get used to C1's quirks, Lightroom will still be better for culling and organization. I can see why it's a superior editor to LR, but my biggest gripe against C1 is its lack of organizational features. And that's as far as I've developed my culling process. If it had no matching jpeg, I tag it red for deletion.

fastrawviewer installationg

If its jpeg is yellow, I might toss the raw file or keep it. I automatically keep a raw file if its jpeg is green. Next I unhide the raw files and go through them side by side with their jpeg counterparts. The goal is to delete 1/3 to 1/2 of all the jpegs. I do this twice, taking a more critical look at the yellows the second time around. Then I go thru the jpegs first, tagging them green for keep, yellow for not sure maybe keep, and red for delete. Back to my color tagging system, purple signifies unrated photos in case a few escape my attention. I hide my raw files with View>Global filters>Always Hide RAW files. Now that I have everything more or less set the way I like it, I'm just gonna leave it as is and get used to the system I made for myself.Īs for my culling workflow, I tag every photo purple after importing. I also customized some of my hot keys like "Set as Compare" and "Clear Compare." I didn't know where to find what though until I clicked on "List Shortcuts." It lists everything, so I don't need to go poking around guessing where I might find a task to edit the hot key for. As I watched his video, I was also messing around with the View scroll down menu to customize how my Toolbar, Browser, Tools, and Viewer appear. Now I don't have to make smart albums for each individual date, only the month.ĪlexOnRAW's livestream on his culling workflow is super helpful. It's not exactly the same as LR, but it's close enough.

fastrawviewer installationg

I found that under the Library Tab, below Filter by stars or color tags, there's a hidden option for date. LR just feels so much more intuitive and simple regarding culling and organizing, but I'm beginning to get used to C1's quirks. The new speed edit keys in C1 21 are actually really useful. I've been using C1 for about 6 weeks now.











Fastrawviewer installationg