So, I will work with some of these presets here to make sure that images show up well. You can also find it from independent photographers who also sell some of these presets. I have my own presets that I bought from certain marketplaces, such as graphicriver. The next step for me would be to develop module and work with each of these photos individually. Since there are only 17 images out of 37, it's not that many photos to work with. I could create many things if I wanted to make the stuff more relevant to myself, my shoot, and the catalog itself. ![]() One other thing that I could potentially do is I could work on some of the metadata. Now 17 is a manageable number, so I don't have to go through and clean them up a little bit more. These flagged photos out of the 37 were only 17 that I thought were very good, and I want to spend some time working with them. It is going to filter all of those photos very quickly. So I'm just going to click on the attribute then the flag icon. Or you can use the keyboard shortcut backslash. Now that the library filter is active, I want to select the attribute, and I want to select all photos that have the flag on them. If the library filter is not available to you, you can go ahead and find it on the View menu, just click the show filter bar. What I'm going to do now is work with the library filter. Now that I've flagged all of my photos, I want to work only with flagged photos. ![]() I'm going to press P to flag it as a pick, and I'm going to move to the next photos and flag the photos that I like and can work with. So what I'm going to do is very quickly, I'm going to flag the photos. Then make sure that these are the photos that I want to work with. Now what I'm going to do in my next step with all of these photos is to quickly go into the loupe view. There, I've gone ahead and quickly rotated all of those images that needed to be rotated. One thing I want to mention, especially when you're doing many files, like so and you want to apply the same effect to them, you just have to select those photos, and then apply the same effect to them, and in this case, they're going to both rotate. I am just going to go ahead and do all of the portrait modes, and then I'll see you at the end of that. You will notice certain photos have a portrait look to them, making them better when they're in the portrait mode. So I will use the Rotate button to rotate all of the photos taken in portrait mode. That is because I like to shoot in a portrait orientation, which means the camera is tilted to the vertical, and you will get a nice long photo. You will notice that some photos sort of look normal, and some photos look abnormal. Now I'm just going to show you how I prepare the photos before I can retouch all of the photos. The photos have a little bit more information. ![]() You can see that I've imported all 37 photos from the D drive, and they exist in the cherry blossom folder shown below. In the last section, we covered the entire ingest process, which was to take all the photos from the media card, copy all of those image files into an appropriate folder on my hard drive, and then import all of those images into Adobe Photoshop Lightroom. This section will continue with a sample workflow to explain how I work with Adobe Photoshop Lightroom. In this exercise, we will learn about Adobe Lightroom Classic. Product: Adobe Lightroom Classic | Subject: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom Classic
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