jigamaree
January 15th, 2008, 08:44 PM
Hi Everybody,
I was just going through my old pictures and came across this one, http://www.sendspace.com/file/92atbf ,that I got in a class on PSE a few years ago (probably more than just a few, I think it was PSE1!). I looked at it in Lightroom and I was able to see what the sliders were doing as I adjusted them without a lot of other distractions. For instance, the color wheel in the corner let me see how moving one slider changed more than just one color. It was so cool seeing the adjustments, that I just had to send everybody the picture via sendspace. The file is almost 6MB and is a jpeg, but that is okay, Lightroom can handle it. The reason it is called color to b&w is because it was used as an example of what PSE can do when using levels and hue and saturation to get a b&w instead of just removing color. Hope you like it and that the link to it works. My first try at uploading a file to www.sendspace.com (http://www.sendspace.com) .
Greg
I was just going through my old pictures and came across this one, http://www.sendspace.com/file/92atbf ,that I got in a class on PSE a few years ago (probably more than just a few, I think it was PSE1!). I looked at it in Lightroom and I was able to see what the sliders were doing as I adjusted them without a lot of other distractions. For instance, the color wheel in the corner let me see how moving one slider changed more than just one color. It was so cool seeing the adjustments, that I just had to send everybody the picture via sendspace. The file is almost 6MB and is a jpeg, but that is okay, Lightroom can handle it. The reason it is called color to b&w is because it was used as an example of what PSE can do when using levels and hue and saturation to get a b&w instead of just removing color. Hope you like it and that the link to it works. My first try at uploading a file to www.sendspace.com (http://www.sendspace.com) .
Greg