Thank you! Thank you! AND THANK YOU! As a beginner, I was having so many problems with this task. However, all good now. Thanks again! I will subscribe!
Yes that's true for if you don't use PS at all. The sharpening in Lightroom is not as sophisticated as in Lightroom however, so if you do use Photoshop in your workflow at all then I still recommend doing it this way.
@@SteveArnoldPhoto I use Lightroom and PS extensively and find the Lightroom sharpening levels work fine (I take your point that PS gives you more control) and you can now batch LR exports. But why don't you set up actions for each output option instead of stepping through manually each time?
Thanks for your question :0) Actually I do have export "actions" in my Luminosity Masking Panel designed for web-size images. I didn't want to assume all viewers of this video have purchased it though, so showed the manual way.
Thank you so much Steve. This video is invaluable and clears up so much. I may have missed something though and have one question. When i right click a saved tif file in lightroom to "edit in", i have the option to "edit in PS" but I dont have the bottom option to "open as layers in PS". So it opens as a single layer. None of my previous edits (layers) are available. But if I "Open with" and select PhotoShop from the File in the file folder, all the layers are there in Photoshop. I hope that all makes sense. Am I missing something. Thank you
Hi Steve, I was under the impression that only .psd files preserved the layers but I thought I heard you imply that .tiff files also preserve layers. Am I correct? Thanks for the video Steve.
Yeah tiff does preserve layers too. It's been a long time since I did it but I seem to remember there being an option to choose to preserve layers or not, when saving from Photoshop. But i think by default it will save with layers. Cheers
Thankyou Steve for your help. Very few people take you this far in their work flow. Can I ask Is this the stage where you ask a printers for a colour profile so you can confirm possible changes to your image. Or is that old school now, If your monitor and work flow is calibrated do you just send the file and leave it to the printers.
What do you mean? Save the PSD file so you can edit it later with all the layers? If so, then just in the menu "File > Save". Please clarify and I can give you a better answer, cheers
This video here explains how to save as a PSD with layers since the new update for Mac. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-vTZZykfS8Xc.html