Showing posts with label Adobe Lightroom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Adobe Lightroom. Show all posts

Adobe Lightroom Plugins


If you are using Adobe Photoshop Lightroom to manage and tweak your photos this is good news for viewing your Lightroom catalogs database outside Lightroom and present it or share them with your clients.

LRViewer is a standalone viewer for Lightroom image previews and that's what makes this piece of software so wonderful.

LRViewer makes no changes to the Lightroom catalog, which means that it can't create any previews that aren't already present in some other words it will not temper your Lightroom files by any means.

Both the catalog (ending in "lrcat" or "lrdb") and the associated preview file (ending in "lrdata") must be present. You open just the catalog; LRViewer then opens the preview file automatically. No images have to be exported from Lightroom, since LRViewer accesses the catalog and previews directly.

Select a picture to see its metadata in the panel at lower-left. Double-click a picture to zoom it to fill the window, or to the largest preview size available. You can navigate between zoomed pictures with the arrow buttons at the top of the window or with the left and right arrow keys.

But this is not all. For about $50 you can add to it LRMaker and it will allow photographers to customize the appearance and behavior of LRViewer for their clients. Planned features of LRVmaker include:

* A built-in DVD burner will allow you to easily assemble the package for a client (catalog, preview file, and LRViewer app) so your client can immediately run LRViewer off the DVD, without installing it on his or her computer. (DVD burning on Windows may not be in the first version. In that event, you'll be easily able to burn DVDs with other burning utilities.)
* You can lock a catalog so that LRViewer will open it only under control of the configuration you provide. (Note that anyone with Lightroom can bypass the lock, so it's not completely secure.)

* You can prevent clients from seeing EXIF information and other metadata.
* You can control what top-level items appear in the outline (Quick Collection, Folders, etc.).
* You can control whether JPEGs can be extracted (a planned feature for LRViewer).
* You can control the maximum preview size to be shown.
* You can arrange for a watermark to appear on images, to help guard against screen captures.
* You can put your logo and a link to your web site on the main window.
* There will eventually (probably not in the first version) be a way for clients to rank or otherwise select images, and for that information to be passed back to you. It won't be entered into the Lightroom catalog, but will be available externally, via a file you can browse and/or with an email.

Note that these are planned features, for which there is no commitment. The final design may include more or less than these, and may implement them in different ways. Not all features listed will be in the first version, but updates will be free.

You can download the LRViewer is a free version from here for both Mac and PC users.

The PDF Instructions manual can be found here.

Another Lightroom Plugin is the Geotag. If you are into Geotagging your photos this plugin would be a must.

This project installs menu items into the Adobe Lightroom interface that allows photos to be tagged with geographic information through the Lightroom interface.

Locations are read from the standard GPX file format and exif information is stored in the image files using Phil Harvey's exiftool.

Geotag-lightroom-plugin is still in a Beta stage and it was created by Jeff Barnes.

It uses a feature of the Export SDK, where you can create a menu item within Lightroom.

The plugin reads GPX information and writes it to the file in Lightroom using Exiftool.

The Features included are:

- Sync photo to GPS using picture of GPS display
- Interpolate location between track points
- Add geotags to original images or save to new location

Hope you enjoy these new Adobe Lightroom Plugins.

What I’d Love to See in Lightroom 2.0

Scott Kelby is the editor and publisher of Photoshop User Magazine, Layers magazine (the how-to magazine for everything Adobe®) and President of the National Association of Photoshop Professionals (NAPP).

In his teaching and writing he’s gotten good feedback as to changes and additions he’d like to see in this great program.

Among other things he wishes for networking and the ability to shoot tethered.
Check out his list and see what might be in store for the next major release of Adobe Photoshop Lightroom.

Read the full article and contribute with an item here.

Maybe it will be featured on the next Lightroom update.

Adobe Lightroom updates to 1.3.1

New update for Adobe Photoshop Lightroom is available for download.

Here are the links for Mac and PC users. See the Lightroom 1.3.1 ReadMe file for additional details.

This update will provide corrections for the following issues:

-The Lightroom 1.3 Print Module could previously cause the application to crash on either OS X 10.5 or 10.5.1 during template usage.

-On Mac OS X 10.5 or 10.5.1, the import process from a card reader or other device into Lightroom could fail to import all or a portion of the selected images.

-A decrease in Develop slider responsiveness introduced in Lightroom 1.3 has been corrected.

-The Lightroom 1.3 Develop module could cause the application to crash if adjustments were made in quick succession.

-Compressed raw files from the Nikon D100 were read incorrectly in Lightroom 1.3.

-A possible artifact in raw file support for the Olympus E-3 has been corrected.

-The Lightroom FTP Plug-in provided as sample code with the Export SDK did not function properly if the password was not saved with the selected FTP preset.

-Editing or creating a new FTP preset immediately prior to using the FTP plug-in provided as sample code with the Export SDK would cause the FTP process to fail.

-Using the Export as Previous option did not work with the FTP plug-in provided as sample code with the Export SDK.

The Finder in Mac OS X 10.5 and 10.5.1 was crashing when viewing files that contain Lightroom XMP Snapshot data created in the develop module. This is an error in how the Finder reads metadata and will require an operating system update to solve. The error can be reduced for additional files going forward by modifying the Lightroom preference to *not* save Develop settings within JPEG, TIFF or PSD files. (Preferences: Catalog Settings: Metadata)

Adobe Lightroom updates to 1.3

Great news from the Adobe house, the Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 1.3 update is now compatible with Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard.

The Lightroom 1.3 and Camera Raw 4.3 updates have been posted to the following locations: Lightroom and Camera Raw (Mac, Win). The updates include support for the following new camera models:

Canon EOS 1Ds Mark III
Canon PowerShot G9
Nikon D3
Nikon D300
Olympus E-3
Olympus SP-560 UZ
Panasonic DMC-L10

If you want to download Adobe Lightroom 1.3 update directly from their FTP servers here are the addresses:

Mac or Windows

What's new in this version:

Lightroom 1.3 includes corrections for the following issues:
  • Writing XMP metadata automatically has been corrected for performance issues
  • Printing with the native resolution option enabled no longer sets the wrong dimension for portrait oriented images
  • Prior to Camera Raw 4.3 there was the possibility that artifacts in edge transitions could be introduced through the Bayer demosaic and luminance noise reductions algorithms. This has been corrected.
  • The Canon sRAW format and the Fuji compressed RAF formats are now supported. Lightroom 1.3 includes the following enhancements.
  • The import dialog now offers the option to render 1:1 previews as part of the import process
  • The export dialog layout has been enhanced
  • A Lightroom Preview Export SDK is available here for developers to create and distribute Export Plug-ins.
For a more detail reference on what is coming with this version take a look at Adobe Lightroom 1.3 Release - What's New blog.

Enjoy

If you are into Lightroom...


If you are into Adobe Lightroom you should consider paying a visit to Sean McCormack on His blog lightroom-blog.com.

He managed to create a Simple Scroll Gallery script that I think it is very well achieved, he also shows you how you can use Adobe Lightroom to format your text to the web.

Did you know that it is possible to create Text slides for Slideshows in Lightroom?
Well He shows you how in a small video.

He also have some podcasts available with Steve McCurry and Chris Rainier.

So again, if you are into Adobe Lightroom you cannot miss this and the updates.