- Joined
- Apr 12, 2019
- Messages
- 12
- Location
- Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
- Lightroom Experience
- Intermediate
- Lightroom Version
- Cloud Service
- Lightroom Version Number
- Lightroom CC
- Operating System
- Windows 10
Good afternoon.
New to this site, thus possibly this query or general area is addressed somewhere, but I couldn't locate it. If someone has a pointer to it, that would be appreciated.
I'm new to Lightroom, but enjoying it immensely along with the advice from the book above and the comments on this site. Photoshop I found daunting and I didn't have the time for the evidently huge learning curve.
I have many photo of flower blossoms - close-ups but not macros - as I continue to tame my inner engineer voice...
I've been trying to adjust the RAW images from the original colour - which is vibrant certainly - to one which appears to have a frozen/silvery appearance, with just the tinge of the original colour on the fringes?
Should I be using the full RAW and removing aspects from it and adjusting, or converting it to B&W and adding aspects to it and adjusting, to get to the desired end?
Or alternatively, seeking the easy way out, is there somewhere I could look to find a preset which might do this?
All advice gratefully received,
Dave Noble
New to this site, thus possibly this query or general area is addressed somewhere, but I couldn't locate it. If someone has a pointer to it, that would be appreciated.
I'm new to Lightroom, but enjoying it immensely along with the advice from the book above and the comments on this site. Photoshop I found daunting and I didn't have the time for the evidently huge learning curve.
I have many photo of flower blossoms - close-ups but not macros - as I continue to tame my inner engineer voice...
I've been trying to adjust the RAW images from the original colour - which is vibrant certainly - to one which appears to have a frozen/silvery appearance, with just the tinge of the original colour on the fringes?
Should I be using the full RAW and removing aspects from it and adjusting, or converting it to B&W and adding aspects to it and adjusting, to get to the desired end?
Or alternatively, seeking the easy way out, is there somewhere I could look to find a preset which might do this?
All advice gratefully received,
Dave Noble