Hello ! i am using it already a long time. Something to mention is, how useful the touchstripes left and right are, to change between screens and swipe over the hole touchscreen too
I’ll have to look into those more, I’ve found those to be more difficult to use than the dials or other buttons so I’ve been just using them as reference in what my dials are being used for. Any suggestions for those strips? So far I’ve been only using them to double tap to silence audio sources, but that’s on the dial too
@@keith-knittel i use them to choose the next 6 sliders in Lightroom, eg. sharpness, clarity, aso. makes it better in my flow to go through the sliders in the same order as they appear in Lightroom
It is a nice video but at some point I don't think it's a helpful review. Like 60% of the time you just point your finger at the loupendeck and talk about pretty basic things. I understand if you don't do any heavy edits but when it comes to showing how it works, I think it's a bit better to show an actual edit. Sorting or rating photos I don't call editing. As a photographer who sometimes has to edit/colograde photos heavily I need to know if it's heplful enough, especially when in my case the photo needs to have at least two or three versions of edit before the client pick one.
Understand what you mean here, I was thinking about this while making the edit. I actually did that for the premiere pro section and cut it out of the final video - it was like over 10 minutes of me explaining lumetri color adjustments that I thought everyone already knows how to make so I cut it out and just showed a screenshot of the adjustments. It's a fine balance of balance of being too granular and boring vs keeping the video moving and too broad. For anything with a slider, the loupedeck is great for adjustments, but for masking and color charts, the mouse is still faster for those. Thanks for the feedback