![]() ![]() And in here I've established a bunch of presets where all I need to do is choose one of these choices, like this one, let go, and then you'll see a progress bar in the upper left of Lightroom. You should know that the vast majority of the time, I would say 90+% of the time, I choose Export with Preset. We're going to go up to the File menu, and we have a bunch of choices here for exporting. In order to get a version of this file that incorporates those changes we need to do the following. And I don't like that anywhere near as good as what I liked after my adjustments. And so if I were to go to the bottom of the Develop module there's a choice called Reset, and that would show me what the original picture looked like. Well the problem is if I were to take one of these images and head over to the Develop module, everything I've done here in the Develop module is only recorded in the Lightroom catalog file as text. ![]() Maybe I need to create JPEG files to email to my wife, or maybe I need high quality TIFF files to send to a magazine. Here I have a folder of images that I would like to send to a friend. Let's jump in and get started in Lightroom. If we actually want to get an image that we can deliver to somebody else, we need to do something to get a finalized version of that file, and we do that through exporting. It's just writing down where you moved the various adjustment sliders to. And Lightroom is only recording what you do in text. Because when you import your images into Lightroom and then you start making changes, the original files are untouched. Well, since wow we've done that, we've gone through those four days, today we're gonna talk about finalizing your files and printing. Day four we showed you how to take your images from the RAW capture that your camera gave you and transform it using Lightroom's Develop settings. How many catalog files should you have, and how can you do a folder setup that can literally change the way you think about your images? If you've seen that lesson already you know what I'm talking about. On day three we talked about catalogs and folders. Instead you can get it optimized for your particular purpose. So on day two we learned how to get our images into Lightroom, and also have to customize the interface so you're not stuck with the standard layout. If this is your first day joining you should know that we've already gone through a few days, and on day one looked at an overview to kind of the big picture of Lightroom so we could get a sense for how's it different from other programs, and it really prepared us for the other days. Let's take a look at what we've done thus far. We're back with Lightroom Classic: The Complete Guide. ![]()
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