Adobe Photoshop Lightroom Book for Digital Photographers,The (Voices That Matter) | 
enlarge | Author: Scott Kelby Brand: Pearson Education Category: Book
List Price: $39.99 Buy New: $15.99 You Save: $24.00 (60%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 89 reviews Sales Rank: 44578
Media: Paperback Edition: 1 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 416 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.1 Dimensions (in): 9.9 x 8 x 0.8
MPN: 9780321492166 ISBN: 0321492161 Dewey Decimal Number: 778.52343 EAN: 9780321492166 ASIN: 0321492161
Publication Date: April 16, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: Brand New Book 100% guaranteed. Never Read before. No underlining or highlighting. Ships within 24 hours of when you order. Free Tracking with every order.Ships the same day you order. Free Tracking with every order. Customer service inquiries responded to immediately. Quality Plus from QP Books.
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Product Description This book takes you beyond showing you which sliders do what to reveal the secrets of the new digital photography workflow using Adobe Lightroom, and he does it using three simple techniques that make this just a great learning tool: 1) Throughout the book Scott shares his own personal settings and studio tested techniques he s developed using Lightroom for his own photography workflow since well before Adobe released even the first Beta version. He knows what really works, what doesn t, and he tells you flat out which tools to use, which to avoid, and why. 2) The entire book is laid out in a real workflow order with everything step-by-step, so you can jump right in using Lightroom like a pro from the very start and sidestep a lot of productivity killing road blocks and time-wasting frustrations that might have tripped you up along the way. 3) In the last two bonus chapters Scott visually answers his No.1 most-asked Lightroom question, which is: Exactly what order am I supposed to do things in, and where does Photoshop fit in? Scott teaches this by showing every step of the entire process, from the initial shoot to the final prints. Both chapters start with an on-location photo shoot, including full details on the equipment, camera settings, and even the lighting techniques. You ll see it all as he takes the photos from each shoot all the way through the entire workflow process, to the final output of the 16x20 prints for the client.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 84 more reviews...
Cut the humor! September 5, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
If you want to be given 25 steps to every little step of the workflow, this is the book for you. If you want to read numerous attempts of humor, while trying to learn Lightroom, this is the book you want. And if you want to have an author keep telling you to export to Photoshop, this is your book. You wonder what software he is talking about sometimes, there are so many references to Photoshop. If he was paid to write about Lightroom, then why does he spend half the book talking about Photoshop? He keeps you going in circles, constantly.
And the illustrations are horrible, at best. They are printed very small, so you have no idea which adjustment is being discussed, let alone, where the cursor is pointing. Puh-lease? What good are the illustrations if you don't know what is being discussed or what is going on? And often times, the illustrations from a discussion is on the NEXT page, so you have to flip back and forth to figure out what he's talking about. Very poor organization and thought process.
Don't get me wrong, this man knows Adobe software upside down and backwards. But his style leaves a lot to be desired. After reading his book I got smart and bought the one by Adobe. THAT's the book you want to read and learn from. Save your money and buy the Adobe book and cut out at least 25 pages of attempted humor and references to exporting to Photoshop.
A Great Reference July 25, 2008 I own several books written by the Photoshop Boys because they are written to tell you specifically how to do certain things. There is a minimal amount of theory (I like to know something about "why" things happen) and a lot of step-by-step "how to". I learned several new techniques to achieve effects in Photoshop and some good suggestions for my basic workflow. The layout is typically instructive with examples and screen shots of each step. It will be on my shelves as a reference from now on.
Adobe Photoshop Lightroom for Digital Photographers July 6, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
A great book for step by step instructions on getting to know Lightroom - as long as you can cope with the 'wordiness' of the book & Scott Kelby's attempt at humour..
Very Informative! July 3, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
Of all the books I have read so far that pertain to photography and post-processing - I got more out of this book than all the others combined. I was a little frustrated trying to do a few things in Lightroom, particularly with Workflow. This book taught me so many tips and now I fly through Lightroom like a pro! It made me LOVE a program that I simply just liked......I don't mind Kelby's humor, I think some folks are too easily annoyed by such things. I think this book is a must for the Lightroom user and I give it A++++.
Scott Grow Up already! June 27, 2008 4 out of 5 found this review helpful
I have a bunch of Scott Kelby books - which means I respect his knowledge and the fact that you can actually get stuff done by reading his books.
Is this book useful? Yes. Will it annoy and irritate you endlessly? Oh!Yes. You have to wade through knee-deep garbage to get to the good stuff.
Scott spends so much time on his puerile, infantile humor and then, pages patting himself on the back when he imagines the reader rolling around laughing at his "humor", there are pages and pages wasted on absolute garbage humor. I won't be surprised if one of these days he packages a fart cushion or plastic turd or something similarly juvenile with his books.
Scott, how old are you? Not 14 or 15 I would imagine.
Someone as knowledgeable and expert as you doesn't need this rubbish, or don't you have enough self-esteem to write straight text without covering it up with this "Oh, you don't like it? Never mind, I'm not serious, Its just a joke."
This is the last Scott Kelby book I buy unless he cleans up his act. There are many, many others who feel the same way - just read the reviews of Kelby books.
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