This week marks the Adobe MAX conference in Los Angeles, Adobe’s annual centerpiece for product announcements. If you would like to get a sample of the course, Hudson is also offering a free download of one of the videos: “ Finding the No-Parallax Point (aka the Nodal Point)” Categories Image editing, Photographic Technique Tags Hudson Henry, panoramas, video training Leave a comment You can find out all the details on Hudson’s website. The Advanced Panorama course is currently on sale for $29.99 directly from Hudson, and will be priced at $59.99 after January 31. Included with the course are the raw files Hudson uses in the videos (for you to follow along), as well as a gear list, course notes and cheatsheets. (There are two versions of the course available: one for Lightroom and Photoshop, the other for Photo RAW.) Hudson also shows you his process for assembling and editing panoramas in Adobe Lightroom, Photoshop and ON1 Photo RAW. The Advanced Panorama Course includes everything you need to know to capture both simple panos and complex multi-row and HDR panoramas. īuilding upon Hudson’s best-selling Panoramas Made Simple ebook (published by CDP Press), this new course contains more than two hours of videos, focusing on all aspects of panorama creation, from choosing gear to field setup, capture, and postproduction. Our good friend-and ace adventure photographer-Hudson Henry has just released his long-awaited Advanced Panorama Course, and is offering it at half-price for a limited time. Read more Categories Features, General, Image editing Tags culling, photo management, post-production Leave a comment As time goes on, and I take more photos, it becomes harder to find key photos from the past (at least those non-portfolio photos), or to even know what I might have hidden that is of some value. It’s not that they’re unimportant, but they aren’t compelling to me at the moment, and as such, they end up disappearing. The rest soon get lost into the archives. For example, out of a shoot where I end up with 600-800 images, I’ll quickly get that to upwards of 50 selects, and I will then spend most of my time working on those photos. I tend to do the majority of my editing - culling, sorting and post-processing - on my most recent photos. As a photo-management tool, I felt it was worth sharing here. I once topped out at 80,000 photos, but about six years ago I came up with an exercise - pruning a single year’s worth of photos - that has helped me get my library better organized and more efficient. (Of those, nearly 40% are from the past five years.) Comparing the size of my library with those of friends of mine, I’m about average, but still, 60,000 is a big number, and managing that many photos can be a bit intimidating. At the end of October, 2019, my photo library contained approximately 60,000 images, mostly taken over the past 20 years.
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