Serge, I know you did a video some years ago on preparing images for printing. It would be great if you revisited that subject but expanded to go into some of the many options beyond paper, like metal and canvas. You could include issues like mounting options, wrap-around edges, backing materials, use of lab profiles, etc.
This is great and I will try these. I own Luminar AI as well and would love to learn more about how to use it, especially for portraits and seascapes. I haven t done much cityscape photography but you're inspiring me. I'm taking your class now and planning a trip to Bangkok to practice.
Thanks Serge for all these helpful tutorials & also thanks for your free presets. Your bnw presets works like a charm on my street images to achieve a high constarst ei inky black look.
Very helpful as always! I could need more help in how to avoid halos, I still struggle with that from time to time. Thank you so much Serge for your very helpful tutorials, they helped me a lot in becoming the photographer that I am today!
Great video as always. I'd be interested in editing a bright (beach) picture with low contrast but a strong visual effect anyways. I very often have the problem, that my whites are to bright and the photo flashes my eyes. I hope i could explain to you what i mean...Keep up the great tutorials and videos :)
Brilliant! The interface on Gradient tool (3 lines) is not intuitive. This shows how to deal with it. Big lesson learned for me: look at all the options in LR panels, they are there for a reason.
How do you create a linear gradient in the middle of the photo that doesn’t start in either the top or the bottom of the frame?? I can’t seem to do that. Is it even possible? Thanks in advance! Your videos are fantastic!!
Thank you so much for the tips, always very helpful. By the way do you think you could do a video of photoshop recipes like the one you did for Lightroom ? bye bye , you are the best
Great video. I would like to learn how to edit, in Lightroom, a portrait that also has a background that is just as important to the image. Specifically a darker scene like a sunset portrait or a nightscape portrait. I have difficulty with the highlights and shadows. If I adjust them too much for the background, the skin of the person in the portrait looks off. Thanks
Serge. Can you make a video on the proper brightness when exporting a photo. I am always paranoid that when I export my finished edit, it looks too dark. Some people have their computers/phones set at a certain brightness. So it is very hard for me to find that sweet spot where the photo does not look too bright or too dark for people when they view it. Thanks for all that you do.
In this case a radial filter is what I would've used. Same thing with less to remove after the fact. Seeing how little sky there is in the photo and the shape of the sky would perfectly fit in the bottom of a largish radial filter. But than I'm a software developer and they are notoriously lazy 😉 Still a great explanation of the concept.
just discover your chanel. love it thank you so much
Serge, I know you did a video some years ago on preparing images for printing. It would be great if you revisited that subject but expanded to go into some of the many options beyond paper, like metal and canvas. You could include issues like mounting options, wrap-around edges, backing materials, use of lab profiles, etc.
I have struggled with the gradient filter and brush tool for a long time. Your vid helped so much! Merci!
This is great and I will try these. I own Luminar AI as well and would love to learn more about how to use it, especially for portraits and seascapes. I haven t done much cityscape photography but you're inspiring me. I'm taking your class now and planning a trip to Bangkok to practice.
Great tips! Thanks! That's my favorite street in Paris!
Great video.
Great video! I tend to use the Color mask rather than luminance mask. I also liked the use of the brush within the gradient filter 😎
Thanks Serge for all these helpful tutorials & also thanks for your free presets. Your bnw presets works like a charm on my street images to achieve a high constarst ei inky black look.
Tks you are right I did tweo coffee table books with it !
Wow, thanks Serge, I learn't something there !
Awesome video my friend! Keep up the good and informative work!
Very helpful as always! I could need more help in how to avoid halos, I still struggle with that from time to time.
Thank you so much Serge for your very helpful tutorials, they helped me a lot in becoming the photographer that I am today!
Great great tip Serge
Great video as always. I'd be interested in editing a bright (beach) picture with low contrast but a strong visual effect anyways. I very often have the problem, that my whites are to bright and the photo flashes my eyes. I hope i could explain to you what i mean...Keep up the great tutorials and videos :)
cool, but how can you fix the sky in between the tree leaves?? it totally was a different color :/
I could paint back some color but it didnt bother me in the final edit
Merci
Id like to see an interior or exterior architectural/Real estate edit
Brilliant! The interface on Gradient tool (3 lines) is not intuitive. This shows how to deal with it. Big lesson learned for me: look at all the options in LR panels, they are there for a reason.
How do you create a linear gradient in the middle of the photo that doesn’t start in either the top or the bottom of the frame?? I can’t seem to do that. Is it even possible? Thanks in advance! Your videos are fantastic!!
Thank you so much for the tips, always very helpful. By the way do you think you could do a video of photoshop recipes like the one you did for Lightroom ? bye bye , you are the best
Great video. I would like to learn how to edit, in Lightroom, a portrait that also has a background that is just as important to the image. Specifically a darker scene like a sunset portrait or a nightscape portrait. I have difficulty with the highlights and shadows. If I adjust them too much for the background, the skin of the person in the portrait looks off. Thanks
Your videos are so helpful merci beaucoup! What mic do you use. I feel you could improve your audio a bit, trying to be helpful not criticize
Serge. Can you make a video on the proper brightness when exporting a photo. I am always paranoid that when I export my finished edit, it looks too dark. Some people have their computers/phones set at a certain brightness. So it is very hard for me to find that sweet spot where the photo does not look too bright or too dark for people when they view it. Thanks for all that you do.
In this case a radial filter is what I would've used. Same thing with less to remove after the fact. Seeing how little sky there is in the photo and the shape of the sky would perfectly fit in the bottom of a largish radial filter. But than I'm a software developer and they are notoriously lazy 😉
Still a great explanation of the concept.
we need techniques about how I take a good photo
the steps the role
Hi Serge - how about a video on removing haloes?
Actually a great idea!
Then when I export it all the changes are gone. What do I do?
Do you ever use the new Lightroom? (Not Classic)? Would love some editing tips on there too.
I do mostly on phone photo see this video here: czcams.com/video/4ZIwPG5BLxY/video.html
@@tutoriels thank you!
Why dont I get that "erase" botton at 4:50 minutes ? :(
pls make a raffle to one of your camera 🙂😅
Ok !