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What Do I Do With Images In Photoshop?   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #656 of 671 |

Question:
I am fairly new to Photoshop, but rarely use it because I don't know
what to do with an image. In your last blog entry you mentioned having a
'workflow'. I guess you mean by that a process to follow when editing
images. Can you tell me what I'm supposed to do?

Answer:
Short Answer: Yes. Have a workflow and use it with every image.

Working with images isn't random. You shouldn't just fiddle with some
filters and auto-corrections and hope to suddenly stumble on something
to make your images look good. What you really want to do is outline a
process to follow so you are sure your images will look their best every
time.

A good workflow takes setup into account as well as image correction.

1. Calibrate your monitor, create an ICC profile, and make color
management decisions
2. Store your original images safely
3. Evaluate the image (composition color and tone) to develop a list
of things to correct (in steps 4-8)
4. Make general color and tone corrections
5. Make small damage corrections (dust, etc.)
6. Make composition changes (cropping, replacing, removing
objects...other 'heroic' measures)
7. Make targeted color and tone corrections.
8. Add enhancements (soft-focus, sharpening, etc.)
9. Save the working/layered version of the working image
10. Save a purposed/final image for output/use


Even long-term users of Photoshop may not have a sensible workflow in
place, but the fact is that it can save tons of time and account for
consistent results.If asked which is the most important of the 10 items
above...I'd have to say you need every one of them to get the most out
of your images. If you are missing any of them, you'll want to consider
adding them to your workflow.

* Calibration and color mangement decisions can greatly affect your
outcome
* Storing your images is essential to ward off data loss
* Evaluating an image tells you what to do and keeps you on track
with corrections
* Having an order to your corrections helps you correct logically so
you aren't taking on the wrong issue at the wrong time (color correcting
a hat that is the wrong color before color correcting the whole image
makes no sense)
* Storing your layered work can save tons of time in making later
changes or enhancements
* Saving your final image separately allows you to make the best
image for any purpose (e.g., a downsized JPEG for the Web, a full-sized
EPS or TIFF for print)

With a workflow established, you'll never be puzzled about what to do
with your images and you'll be ready to explore them the same way every
time, checking over your list so nothing gets missed.

I teach a course on betterphoto.com that will help with workflow issues.
It is called From Monitor To Print, and helps you establish a full
workflow, covering all 10 items in the list. You can find the course
here:
http://www.betterphoto.com/photocourses/RIC01.asp
<http://www.betterphoto.com/photocourses/RIC01.asp>

If you are simply uncomfortable with Photoshop, you may need even more
basic help, which I can provide in my Photoshop 101 course, found here:
http://www.betterphoto.com/photocourses/RIC03.asp
<http://www.betterphoto.com/photocourses/RIC03.asp>

But whether you take a course or not, take notes on what you want to do
and establish a workflow. It will save you time, and probably money as
well!



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]




Tue Apr 3, 2007 5:47 pm

ps6com
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Question: I am fairly new to Photoshop, but rarely use it because I don't know what to do with an image. In your last blog entry you mentioned having a ...
Richard Lynch
ps6com
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Apr 3, 2007
5:50 pm
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