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Lightroom Question
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<blockquote data-quote="Dave_W" data-source="post: 77832" data-attributes="member: 9521"><p>Download a copy of Lightroom 4 for a free 15 day trial (or is it 30?) and give it a try. As to your earlier question, you can have all the blown out portions of your image highlighted in red so that you can easily see which portions of are blown out. That said, data blown out beyond a certain point is not recoverable regardless of the program you use. Certainly perfect exposure is always the best but at least underexposed image has more salvageable data compared to overexposed data</p><p></p><p>Lightroom is, IMO, the best program on the market for photography. It has amazing depth and even the most prolific photographers only scratch the surface of it's total capabilities. And then when you couple LR with the Nik suite of software (also downloadable for a free trial) you'll have a set up second to none.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Dave_W, post: 77832, member: 9521"] Download a copy of Lightroom 4 for a free 15 day trial (or is it 30?) and give it a try. As to your earlier question, you can have all the blown out portions of your image highlighted in red so that you can easily see which portions of are blown out. That said, data blown out beyond a certain point is not recoverable regardless of the program you use. Certainly perfect exposure is always the best but at least underexposed image has more salvageable data compared to overexposed data Lightroom is, IMO, the best program on the market for photography. It has amazing depth and even the most prolific photographers only scratch the surface of it's total capabilities. And then when you couple LR with the Nik suite of software (also downloadable for a free trial) you'll have a set up second to none. [/QUOTE]
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