Are there certain standard things you do to large batches of photos to just punch them up a bit? Maybe just bump up the exposure a bit, add a touch of contrast, bring up the blacks a bit? Something like that? Or do you individually adjust each frame?
Anyone want to give my their most common step by step on how they approach an image?
For me, each photo is different, especially on vacation where photos come from sooooo many different places and lighting conditions.
However, you don't necessarily have to adjust each photo individually, one-by-one. I usually have several similar photos that are taken around the same time, at the same place, in the same lighting conditions. With these several "similar" photos, I can make my adjustments to 1 photo and then "Sync" these adjustments to all the "similar" photos.
I do like to increase the blacks a little bit. I also like to increase the Clarity and Vibrance. How much I increase the other sliders in the Develop module will depend on the photo itself.
Hope you're getting the hang of using Lightroom. Looks like Scott Kelby's book
The Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 3 Book for Digital Photographers (
link to Amazon) is coming out on July 12!
The other book I'd really recommend, too, is Martin Evening's book
The Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 3 Book: The Complete Guide for Photographers (
link to Amazon), which came out earlier this month on June 8. As good as this book is, it's 672 pages, so it's *very* thorough. I'd probably use this more as a reference book.
Hope that helps!
