I’ve had a number of emails about my Photoshop workflow already, but they’re difficult to answer because a lot of this stuff is demonstration-based. I could make a video, but that’s very time consuming and means I can’t do other stuff. However, for a tutorial of this sort to be useful and meaningful, it will have to be properly recorded and edited, supplied in HD on DVD, and will take some time to do. The tradeoff is always blogging vs commercial work – realistically it’ll probably cost a little something in order to justify producing.
So, before I go off and spend a couple of days producing one – I’d like to get an idea of how you all feel about it via the two quick questions below. Thanks! MT
I would also pay for the video tutorial even though I only use Lr and Aperture. Your photography is excellent.
Thank you. The overwhelming number of responses means…the video is in production 🙂
Certainly I would!
Just to emphasize: camera specific workflow.
Haha, there are so many of them it might not fit onto one DVD.
I use D3 with ZF 28 F2 and CS5. I’d like to learn your workflow of ACR and Photoshop, especially how you correct the white balance and color in photoshop.
Noted, it’ll be something I cover. There’s also these two articles on color, if you haven’t already seen them: one and two
I mean this more as a statement of fact than a compliment…but I would be more interested in seeing your photoshop workflow in video format than any other modern day photographer that I can think of…seriously. Would I pay for it? Hell yes. Please, please…please.
Haha, thanks for the feedback!
An ACR/Photoshop workflow video would be great, I use an M9 and sometimes a D700 with Apt 3, but I have CS5 and would like to learn how to use it effectively, as displayed by your results. Because of your knowledge of photography and way of describing technique, I would purchase it.
Thanks for the feedback!
Almost solely use lightroom but guess one could transfer some/most(?) of the steps?
The ACR portion applies because it’s the same, but there are some things you can only do with Photoshop.
Particularly Fuji X100 results.
That’s an interesting idea, camera specific workflow…
oooh, yes!