New photos of Nags Head have been added to the photo gallery.
Category: Photography
Using Frequency Separation in Photoshop to Soften Skin
Frequency Separation allows you to separate the texture of an image from the tone and color.
Camera Settings for Concert Photography
Here’s some great tips for concert photography, but they can also apply for school plays, or school music performances too. (Which is more what I’d be taking photos of.)
Using Lightroom Web Module for Photo Sharing
I’ve recently added a photo site to PressleyPress.com for hosting the photos I’m proud of. The site was built using Lightroom’s Web module. The site isn’t flashy, but it does the trick.
Importing Your iPhoto Library Into Lightroom
I’ve been using iPhoto almost since its creation, so naturally I’ve got a metric buttload of photos in its library. Now that I’m getting more serious about my photography, iPhoto just isn’t going to cut it anymore, especially since it anti-aliases your photos when displayed on an LCD screen. I’m switching to Lightroom. (For $9.99 a month you can subscribe to Adobe Creative Cloud which gives you Photoshop CC and Lightroom. It also includes cloud storage.)
After doing some Googling, I found a couple of ways to import your iPhoto Library into Lightroom, but they all seemed to involve duplicating your “Masters” directory contained within the iPhoto Library package. My laptop’s HD doesn’t have enough room remaining to create a duplicate of all my photos, so I came up with a different solution.
You can’t directly browse inside the iPhoto Library package using Finder, so Lightroom can’t browse there either. You have to create a way for Lightroom to access your photos via the filesystem. In my mind the easiest way was to create a symlink (or “pointer” folder) to the Masters folder in your iPhoto Library.
- Open Applications -> Utilities -> Terminal
- type “cd Pictures” (minus the quotes)
- type “ln -s iPhoto\ Library/Masters/ Pics” (minus the quotes) This creates a “pointer” folder called “Pics” to your iPhoto Library Master folder
- Now Lightroom will be able to see the photos in iPhoto if you browse to Pictures\Pics
Note : You don’t have to call the symlink “Pics”, obviously. You can call it whatever you want. As a matter a fact, prior to running that “ln” command, make sure the symlink you’re creating doesn’t have the same name as a file or directory that already exists under the Pictures folder in your Home Directory.