View Full Version : software
tarahj
29th of June 2010 (Tue), 11:47
Does everyone use photoshop? Im looking for a new program , not sure what to get
Pita_146
29th of June 2010 (Tue), 15:12
What are you trying to do?
I use lightroom.
tarahj
29th of June 2010 (Tue), 15:33
Just looking for a new program to edit my photos on. Right now I have Corel PaintShop Pro x3 and Im not to fond of it.
CAL Imagery
29th of June 2010 (Tue), 21:40
Unless you're getting a mad discount or really know how to PP (which I doubt the question would arise if so), PS is vast overkill for most people. Try Elements or another comparably priced program.
murtaugh
30th of June 2010 (Wed), 14:10
i'm in the same boat, i am to am newer to PP. i hear lightroom is very popular, and i think not certain but think i just saw lightroom 2 on sale it bhphoto.com for $90, don't quate me, hope that helps
murtaugh
30th of June 2010 (Wed), 14:11
whoops i spoke to soon, it was $90 but it was the upgrade package, sorry
CAL Imagery
30th of June 2010 (Wed), 15:01
You can download at least Adobe software for a 30 day free trial on their website. That way you can ostensibly check it out if it's something you want to purchase. I would rather have PS than LR if I had to choose one, but I use LR way more because it's a RAW converter/file management program. Enjoy.
Gnhntn
30th of June 2010 (Wed), 15:55
I use Photoshop Elements, and it does everything I need it to do. Have thought about giving Lightroom a try , as I have heard nothing but good about it. Either of those should do the job for you.
dugcross
30th of June 2010 (Wed), 16:56
I have Photoshop and have been using it for just over 20 years. It's a great program but a couple of things to consider. It's very expensive and it has a very high learning curve. If you never used it, it will be quite a while before you will get the hang on it.
Snydremark
30th of June 2010 (Wed), 17:09
I've been using Lightroom 2 for a while now, and am going to upgrade to LR3 when my 30day trial is up. I really like how it handles RAW conversion and the PP controls offered in it more than meet my needs; especially now that LR3 has added dodge/burn controls to the local adjustment brush.
Photoshop certainly has its uses, but as others have mentioned, it can be a bit of overkill and is quite expensive.
Organic Treats
30th of June 2010 (Wed), 17:16
Like most said I would get LR3 trial a go. I just got LR3 and CS5 with the educational discount and I'm loving them so far.
tarahj
30th of June 2010 (Wed), 18:42
Thanks everyone for the input, Looks like I might be giving LR a try!
TGrundvig
30th of June 2010 (Wed), 18:52
I have LR2 and Photoshop CS4. I've heard a lot of good things from Elements users but I have never used it myself. I also use Topaz Adjust, and unless things have changed, there is no plug in for LR. I'm newer to LR but it's growing on me more and more. Primarily because of the image management.
The best way I heard it described was like this...."Photoshop was designed for designers and photographers learned how to use it for their needs. Lightroom was designed FOR photographers." Feel free to agree, disagree, or ad your own thoughts to that statement. Since getting LR, I personally feel that statement to be pretty accurate, but there are still some things I do in PS.....because I haven't figured out to achieve the same effect in LR. I'm still learning.
dugcross
30th of June 2010 (Wed), 19:18
Lightroom and Aperture are the same programs but Lightroom and Photoshop are not. The following I posted a good while back explaining the differences between the two. This is not coming from myself but from Adobe's web site.
Adobe Photoshop software is the industry standard in digital image editing. Photoshop holds an important place in the pro photographer's toolbox, for detailed pixel-level editing and compositing, but photographers face a variety of workflow concerns beyond image editing. Lightroom 2 addresses these needs in a photographer-centric way. Each module in Lightroom is dedicated to an essential photographic task — use the Library for importing and managing photos; the Develop module for fundamental photographic adjustments and processing hundreds of photographs at a time; and the Slideshow, Web, and Print modules to easily present photos onscreen, online, or in print. Lightroom also goes further, enabling you to manage raw files, even if they are offline, with automatic importing from the folder on your computer used for tethered shooting.
Lightroom excels at processing large volumes of photographs, creating the perfect negative, and outputting collections to the web, print, and slide shows. Photoshop remains the ultimate pixel-level, individual image-editing, and compositing application. Together, Lightroom and Photoshop are the comprehensive software duo for post-processing and editing of digital imagery.
For example, you may have 2,000 photographs and need to quickly preview, sort and rate them, embed your copyright on each, correct white balance, change tonal and color values, and make monochrome copies (or add a wide array of other special effects). Then, you need to output to a slide show, print, or the web, and all under the pressure of time constraints. For this common type of photographic workflow, Lightroom is the ideal solution.
Now perhaps some of your photographs are destined for an advertising layout. After choosing the best images, you may need to add a special effect to a model's eyes or change the pattern of a dress or pull the model completely away from her background to create an intricate, multilayered composite. For this, Photoshop is the ideal solution.
tarahj
1st of July 2010 (Thu), 11:01
Now perhaps some of your photographs are destined for an advertising layout. After choosing the best images, you may need to add a special effect to a model's eyes or change the pattern of a dress or pull the model completely away from her background to create an intricate, multilayered composite. For this, Photoshop is the ideal solution.
When you say photoshop, do you mean the 600-800 dollar program of the elements 8 for 90 bucks?
Organic Treats
1st of July 2010 (Thu), 16:14
He is meaning the expensive one. If you are a student you can get a huge discount.
DerekMartinezPhotography
1st of July 2010 (Thu), 16:24
Almost worth taking classes to get the discount.
dugcross
1st of July 2010 (Thu), 16:33
When you say photoshop, do you mean the 600-800 dollar program of the elements 8 for 90 bucks?
Yes, Elements is the VERY stripped down version of Photoshop
Organic Treats
1st of July 2010 (Thu), 17:20
Yeah I got CS5 and LR3 for $330 shipped. CS5 is $600 alone.
tarahj
2nd of July 2010 (Fri), 11:27
I am a student at our community college, How do I get a discount?
Organic Treats
2nd of July 2010 (Fri), 11:38
I am a student at our community college, How do I get a discount?
http://store1.adobe.com/cfusion/store/html/index.cfm?store=OLS-EDU&##store=OLS-EDU&view=ols_cat&loc=en_us&catID=SPECIALS
Check your eligibility. What I did was ordered my stuff and at the end they ask you for proof and I gave them my ID, check stub, and phone number to verify I work there. In your case I believe you just send them a copy of your ID and put the schools phone number in the box.
tarahj
2nd of July 2010 (Fri), 13:18
is there a difference between the student & teacher edition and the original?
Organic Treats
2nd of July 2010 (Fri), 14:28
No it's the same exact program. No difference at all. The only thing that Adobe says is you can't transfer the license to another person but we all know nobody follows companies policies.
tarahj
2nd of July 2010 (Fri), 14:51
Thank you so much, So i can get adobe photoshop for like 80 percent off right , (just making sure Im not dreaming or misunderstanding) It said like 199.00
Organic Treats
2nd of July 2010 (Fri), 15:08
You are correct and no problem! I got CS5 for $199 and LR3 was $89.99
Loving them!
tarahj
2nd of July 2010 (Fri), 15:49
Woo Hoo Thanks, Maybe I can rake up some money and buy it! Just moved into a new house and trying to get things situated, plus air went out!!! Not good, but getting there.
Organic Treats
2nd of July 2010 (Fri), 16:42
Did you ever try the trial? You can trial both CS5 and LR3. I think you should to see which one you should get first since money is tight.
tarahj
2nd of July 2010 (Fri), 17:09
I have the trial to LR3 but I dont like it. I like to clone and try effects and things like that the only thing i seen on LR3 ...was well lighting, colors, crop, and a few other things, unless I didnt look in the right spot of LR3 . I didnt really have much time to try the trial of LR3 . I didnt know there was a trial of CS5.
Organic Treats
2nd of July 2010 (Fri), 17:14
oh ok. Well CS5 is the ****. You can do a lot with it.
texaskev
3rd of July 2010 (Sat), 01:27
I'm using CS4 (photoshop). But I only use about 5% of what that software can do. I only do photo editing and PS can do much more. So I may switch from this high $ software to lightroom or something more photo editing specific.
the jimmy
3rd of July 2010 (Sat), 19:00
Anyone used, or using GIMP? http://www.gimp.org/
CAL Imagery
6th of July 2010 (Tue), 08:57
Anyone used, or using GIMP? http://www.gimp.org/
That'd be another good choice for those not wanting to shell out money for Adobe products, even with a mad student discount.
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