Lightroom 4 beta - A hands on review
Posted: Sun Feb 12, 2012 1:49 pm
Lightroom 4 beta has been out since late January and I've been playing with it for a while (download is HERE).
Here is the "what's new" list from Adobe:
Some of this is a but ho hum for me (video publishing, emaling from LR). Some has me perplexed (a photo book module that is in essence an add-on for the Blurb Photo Book service, but not terribly compatible with other publishers) and some is pretty neat. I'll touch on the latter below and update my observations as time passes.
The new Map module
Previous versions had some support for GPS metadata, but with LR4 you more easily add GPS metadata. With LR4 you can load tracklogs directly (GPX format only so I'll probably still use the excellent Friedl GPS plugin) or it will read GPS info from your sidecar files or direct from the EXIF data. That alone is not a lot different. The big difference is it's all pulled together in a new Map module. There you can see your GPS image data on Google maps or you can search to locate a map location and drag the location to images and LR will tag the images with that GPS location. As an example the screenshot below is after zooming in on the map to view a spot where I took a number of images at Mt Tomah Botanical Gardens earlier this year. It shows markers (with number of images at that spot) for each geotagged image. I've clicked one of the markers and the image taken there has popped up.
Additionally within the GPS module you can have "collections" of GPS locations (centred around a single point with a radius you specify in km). Clicking a collection will display ALL the matching images from the LR library. In the screenshot below you can see the radius for the Mt Tomah location as the circle in the google map image.
Here is the "what's new" list from Adobe:
- Highlight and shadow recovery brings out all the detail that your camera captures in dark shadows and bright highlights.
- Photo book creation with easy-to-use elegant templates.
- Location-based organization lets you find and group images by location, assign locations to images, and display data from GPS-enabled cameras.
- White balance brush to refine and adjust white balance in specific areas of your images.
- Additional local editing controls let you adjust noise reduction and remove moiré in targeted areas of your images.
- Extended video support for organizing, viewing, and making adjustments and edits to video clips.
- Easy video publishing lets you edit and share video clips on Facebook and Flickr®.
- Soft proofing to preview how an image will look when printed with color-managed printers.
- Email directly from Lightroom using the email account of your choice.
Some of this is a but ho hum for me (video publishing, emaling from LR). Some has me perplexed (a photo book module that is in essence an add-on for the Blurb Photo Book service, but not terribly compatible with other publishers) and some is pretty neat. I'll touch on the latter below and update my observations as time passes.
The new Map module
Previous versions had some support for GPS metadata, but with LR4 you more easily add GPS metadata. With LR4 you can load tracklogs directly (GPX format only so I'll probably still use the excellent Friedl GPS plugin) or it will read GPS info from your sidecar files or direct from the EXIF data. That alone is not a lot different. The big difference is it's all pulled together in a new Map module. There you can see your GPS image data on Google maps or you can search to locate a map location and drag the location to images and LR will tag the images with that GPS location. As an example the screenshot below is after zooming in on the map to view a spot where I took a number of images at Mt Tomah Botanical Gardens earlier this year. It shows markers (with number of images at that spot) for each geotagged image. I've clicked one of the markers and the image taken there has popped up.
Additionally within the GPS module you can have "collections" of GPS locations (centred around a single point with a radius you specify in km). Clicking a collection will display ALL the matching images from the LR library. In the screenshot below you can see the radius for the Mt Tomah location as the circle in the google map image.