Apologies for the lengthy video! Lightroom and Photoshop are intricate software programs with numerous adjustments, making it challenging to condense my thoughts into a UA-cam video. How do you edit your images? Thanks again for watching! Cheers.
Thanks Paul. I wish I picked a different composition in the field to then editing in Lightroom and photoshop. It isn’t the prettiest image but my heart was in the right place to show all the challenges in the field and in post processing. Second image is a lot better ☺️. Thank you for watching, the encouragement and kind words. Have a great weekend!
@@MattShannonPhoto You are so right, I started photographing Mushrooms a few years back. I can spend the entire day smelling the sweet forest litter without being disturbed.
@@MattShannonPhoto - less than a year - of course I just started photography a year ago. When I tried to download lightroom it wanted me to use my google account, but then I didn't remember my pass word and it wouldn't let me in anymore - thats when I found ON1 - works basically the same - but editing is a huge learning curve in its own. I only do Wildlife, seems most people with on1 use it for landscape or portrait work, It's hard to find someone using it for Wildlife, so I watch people with Lightroom and then play with ON1 - trying the same techniques.
Once you've stacked the images so that everything is in focus, and then you move each layer on top of the 'focused' layer, doesn't brushing each individual layer afterward 'unsharpen/de-focus' the parts you're painting in white? Could you help me understand this part? I get the purpose of revealing the best parts of each image using the mask, but am a little confused about undoing parts of the 'all in focus' layer.
Apologies for the lengthy video! Lightroom and Photoshop are intricate software programs with numerous adjustments, making it challenging to condense my thoughts into a UA-cam video. How do you edit your images?
Thanks again for watching! Cheers.
Great video to drink a cup of coffee too!
I have a few pots of coffee just to film and edit this one. ❤️☕️🙌🙌
Awesome stuff here Matt...thoroughly enjoyed this!
That made my day, happy to hear it thank you! Explaining how I edit on video is difficult but I’m excited to keep trying 👍🙂
Thank you for showing some of your tips. I never would have thought to do half of them. Really lovely work!
Thanks so much! 😊 And thank you for watching, cheers
The artist at work! Fantastic stuff. Different composition but I like the 2nd image the best.
Thanks Paul. I wish I picked a different composition in the field to then editing in Lightroom and photoshop. It isn’t the prettiest image but my heart was in the right place to show all the challenges in the field and in post processing. Second image is a lot better ☺️. Thank you for watching, the encouragement and kind words. Have a great weekend!
Thanks so much for sharing another wonderful video like always, keep up with the awesome content 👍👌
🙌 thank you! Back out into the field to take more pictures. Have a fantastic week! Cheers
Yes, a great tutorial! 'No man's land', a PNW term for sure but fading.
I bet, the PNW is a hot spot for visitors now. Gotta go out on dark rainy days to be alone lol.
@@MattShannonPhoto You are so right, I started photographing Mushrooms a few years back. I can spend the entire day smelling the sweet forest litter without being disturbed.
Great tutorial! Always nice to see how other photographers process images. Thanks!
I missed this comment, thank you so much!
Noice!
I want to see an AI version of yourself teaching us how to us AI to edit our images in Photoshop.
Beautiful! What is your goal in taking all the shots? As in, what's the thought process? How many shots and ideas should someone look for?
more great stuff. I use ON1, it's similar to this - I've got loads to learn for editing.
Great to hear thank you! How long have you been using ON1?
@@MattShannonPhoto - less than a year - of course I just started photography a year ago. When I tried to download lightroom it wanted me to use my google account, but then I didn't remember my pass word and it wouldn't let me in anymore - thats when I found ON1 - works basically the same - but editing is a huge learning curve in its own. I only do Wildlife, seems most people with on1 use it for landscape or portrait work, It's hard to find someone using it for Wildlife, so I watch people with Lightroom and then play with ON1 - trying the same techniques.
Once you've stacked the images so that everything is in focus, and then you move each layer on top of the 'focused' layer, doesn't brushing each individual layer afterward 'unsharpen/de-focus' the parts you're painting in white? Could you help me understand this part? I get the purpose of revealing the best parts of each image using the mask, but am a little confused about undoing parts of the 'all in focus' layer.
Exstra