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Trying to Learn Light Room 4
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<blockquote data-quote="Mike FM" data-source="post: 142499" data-attributes="member: 13959"><p>Lr is an organized workflow, so really just go through each section in order and adjust what's required. You can't mess up anything by experimenting. The best advice I can give is that a little goes a long way. People tend to over do the adjustments to make them "pop" when really a light touch lends to a more "natural" looking end result. </p><p></p><p>I don't know all the details of how this was shot, but it looks like your camera is back-focusing....or the AF target was about 3' behind the cat. You can clearly see the ground behind it as super sharp and the foreground fuzzy where the front paws are placed. I'd do a simple test to see if it's the camera, technique or it could have been the cat moving forward.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Mike FM, post: 142499, member: 13959"] Lr is an organized workflow, so really just go through each section in order and adjust what's required. You can't mess up anything by experimenting. The best advice I can give is that a little goes a long way. People tend to over do the adjustments to make them "pop" when really a light touch lends to a more "natural" looking end result. I don't know all the details of how this was shot, but it looks like your camera is back-focusing....or the AF target was about 3' behind the cat. You can clearly see the ground behind it as super sharp and the foreground fuzzy where the front paws are placed. I'd do a simple test to see if it's the camera, technique or it could have been the cat moving forward. [/QUOTE]
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