From the category archives:

photography tutorials

Do you use Lightroom? I do.

I love Lightroom. (Well, I have LR2. Dear Adobe, you are more than welcome to send me LR3. Just sayin’)

Did you know that there are a bajillion plugins for Lightroom? There are.

I love plugins.

My latest favorite is Export to Facebook – this has really come in handy lately, because I was able to send all of the photos from Ken’s family Christmas party to the Hoskins Family Christmas album in Facebook with just one click.

Easy peasy!

I also just installed the Storyboarder plugin, and it is fabulous for making quick and easy storyboards for my blog. Now, this one requires a donation to unlock full features, but they leave it up to you as to how much you want to donate … it is definitely worth $5!!

ken snowball

I am supposed to need to add this disclaimer … Ken does NOT throw like a girl. He was “slowing it down” so that I could get good pictures. He did not tell me to say that. Did you, Ken? *ahem*

So I was all ready to type that LR doesn’t have the ability to apply my brush watermarks, but then I found another plugin, installed it and figured it out.

And I. Am. In. Lightroom. Heaven.

LR/Mogrify 2

I will spare you the details on how to install this plugin (maybe a tutorial later?) but I just saved my watermark as a .psd file (straight up Photoshop) and then used the “graphical watermarks” portion of the mogrify plugin to put it on the image as it was being exported. (Somewhere in Georgia, my mom’s head just exploded from having to read that sentence … I will post more pictures later, Mom.)

Voila!

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The only thing I don’t like about this is the freedom to mouse+place the watermark. I just kind of have to make a wild guess about where it’s going to land based on the parameters I plug in … so that’s kind of odd. Especially since I don’t like things centered and am no stranger to blown highlights and a lot of white in my images.

But this can be a huge timesaver when I want to do a blog post with a lot of pictures. Oh wait, that’s every blog post. Hmmm, I guess I’ll use this one a lot.

I would also love to be able to use Export to Flickr, but I prefer putting watermarks on my Flickr images due to some stealing issues I had a while back. And even though nighttime sleep is going great, my brain may still be too mushy to figure out how to do the watermark + Flickr export.

And oh yes … WE HAD A WHITE CHRISTMAS!!!

white christmas

My first white Christmas ever! It was Emma and Lucy’s first white Christmas, as well, but I’m 32 and have never had snow on Christmas. So exciting!!

(For those wondering, Ken spent the first 10 years of his life in Michigan, so not his first white Christmas)

Anyway, we’re taking down the Christmas decorations today, and I’m happy. I love having them up, but I NEED my house back. I need to get these Christmas boxes out of the hallway. My depression is kicking in, and I’ve got to get this place cleaned up before I shut down completely.

We had a wonderful holiday with family and friends, and we are so very very blessed.

Miss Lucy enjoyed her first Christmas (I think) and it was so good to have her here with us. Sometimes, it just hits me in the gut how close we came to losing her, and I’m just so thankful that she’s here and healthy as a horse. And almost as big as one, too.

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I hope you all had a wonderful holiday!! xo

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I wrote this up for this week’s FIF over at I Heart Faces, but since the blog gurus are at the workshop, I think I submitted it too late to be put on the blog. Bad Keli! So I thought I’d post it here. Happy Friday!!

I am one of the only contributors not attending the workshop this weekend, and while I am very sad to not be attending, I have a 2-month old good reason. But I am SO there next year!!

Anyway, I decided to take this week’s Fix-It Friday image (from the lovely and talented Michelle) and do a bunch of quick Lightroom fixes. Five clicks or less. To highlight some of the amazing Lightroom presets that are available to you.

Photo Flavors

Essential Kit :: Marta Loves Presets

One Willow Studios Retro Candy by Jessica Paige

Sometimes, a great fix is only a few clicks away!

Have a great weekend!

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Beth asked …

I just got Lightroom. Teach me how to use it? (yes, that’s a question)

Also, Anna and Noah think you are super talented with your blanket/quilt making skills. Anna wants to know if she can lay on it. Can she?

I promise to start working on some Lightroom tutorials. I have a list already … just gotta find the time to write and screenshot and write some more.

And I hope Anna and Noah and Eli are all enjoying that quilt. I had a blast making it while thinking of your amazing family and your children. All five of them.

Sarah asked …

How the heck do you save all your photos once you finish editing them in PS?
Do you save the original version also, or only the edited version?
Do you have a way you file them so you can find them easily?
When you put a watermark on your photo, do you save an original without it in case you want to print it out one day? Or do you just take it off later? How do you do that if you save your pic as a jpeg instead of the photoshop version?

Oh good questions!! They all kind of tie into each other, so I’ll go through my workflow, and that should cover all of them.

I shoot in RAW format only – there are many reasons for this, so that’s a different post altogether. But let’s just start with that.

I upload my images into Lightroom straight from my camera or card and initially arrange them by date. Once they’re all uploaded, I go through them and delete the unwanted images. Sometimes, I do quick edits as I’m going through them, but most of the time, I just click through and reject/delete. [I will write a full post on how I do this very soon.]

Once I have the images I want to keep, I go through and edit them. I basically have a little folder with my favorite presets that I use all.the.time. Some of them aren’t anything more than a little boost in brightness & contrast while others completely change the tones of the image. If I have a bunch of images that were basically taken in the same light (i.e., Disney images) then I batch-edit using the same preset. [tutorial coming soon]

I don’t save originals straight out of my camera, because it is one-click to “reset” the image back to it’s original format in Lightroom. Plus, that would take up WAY too much room on my computer.

At this very moment, the images that I upload straight from my camera/card are on my computer (C and D drives) while I have my Lightroom catalog backed up on one of our servers. One of these days, I’ll get a separate harddrive just for my images, but the server is a great backup for now.

So once I finish editing in Lightroom, I send to PS for final edits, re-sizing, adding my watermark, making storyboards, etc. I export all images from Lightroom using JPEG format (I do not resize!) into a folder on one of our personal servers. I have them organized from there into about a zillion different folders.

Most edited originals go into a folder called “Lightroom Exports” – if I make changes in PS (adding textures, changing tones, etc), then I save it in that folder, as well. So if I need to go back and print an image, I pull the large file from that folder.

Once I edit in PS, I resize to no more than 1000px on the longest side and add my watermark. Then, I save that image into a folder called “Flickr” – I have subfolders there for various subjects (emma, house, vacation, etc.) All of these folders are also on our server, so the ONLY images on my computer are the originals uploaded straight from my camera.

The re-sized and watermarked images are the ones I upload to Flickr or to my blog.

As for organizing my photos, everything is organized in Lightroom by date, and I add tags when I have time. Outside of Lightroom, all of my images are organized into different folders that probably make sense only to me.

Did that cover everything? Please let me know if you have any other questions or would like to see more clarification.

Misty (a sweet friend from high school with the cutest little girl!!) asked …

When did you decide to stay home with Emma full-time? Did you leave for maternity leave and never go back or did you go back for a while and then make that decision? And how did y’all make that work financially (without me getting too much into your business)?

We decided while I was pregnant that I would leave my job and stay home with Emma, so when I left my job a week before she was born, we all knew that was it. I know a lot of people who do maternity leave and then don’t go back so they can get paid for it, but I just couldn’t do that, so my last day at work was my last day of getting paid.

Not to get too specific, but Ken bought our house while he was still single, so we knew that his salary alone could pay all of our bills/mortgage/groceries, etc. I made decent money at my old job, but I used to to joke that his salary paid the bill while my salary was the tip.

Since we made the decision while I was pregnant, we knew that we would be losing my salary, so we socked away a lot of money into savings, as well.

Then, in March 2008, Ken made the tough decision to leave his well-paying corporate job (due to stress and unbelievable hours) to start his own business. And all financial security flew out the window. I can’t even tell you how we made it the past couple of years … I truly have no idea how we paid our bills on what was in our bank account. It was more stress than I could ever imagine, and there were definitely times where we were borrowing from Peter to pay Paul, but we made it through. And due to an opportunity that he just couldn’t pass up, Ken is back in the corporate world. (Not for the same company as before)

I can tell you that we worked VERY hard to stretch our pennies, and that included using cloth diapers on Emma, menu planning and coupon clipping to save money on groceries, adjusting to lower/higher thermostat settings, using homemade cleaning products and detergent, shopping at Goodwill and consignment stores, making some of Emma’s clothes and cloth diaper covers, reading library books instead of buying new, renting movies from RedBox or the library instead of buying them, asking for clothes and shoes (for Emma) for birthdays/holidays, eating out was a luxury, just doing without.

But sometimes, it’s just not doable. I know many many moms who cry while driving to work, because they’ve calculated and calculated to no avail. Sometimes, doing without just isn’t enough. 

In the end, I have no secret formula … I honestly feel very blessed.

Casey asked …

Where did you get the headphones?

… from this post.

I think I originally told someone that the headphones came from Target, but I think they were actually from Walmart. The brand is Phillips, and the package says 6+ years, but they fit Emma just fine. They only had one color (blue/white) when I went, but perhaps they come in different colors? I assure you, we would have wound up with purple or pink if they had those options.

Tiffany Lee asked …

I love the color of your photos and am just curious how much of that is camera setting versus post-processing.On average how many photos do you post process? Do you typically batch process them? And when you are post processing are you manually adjusting your photos or typically using actions.

… from this post.

I actually emailed Tiffany back straight away, but I thought I’d post my answer here in case anyone else was wondering.

I post-process pretty much all of my images, even if it’s just a contrast or brightness adjustment. I shoot in manual, so hardly any of my images have the same settings, but if I have a series of photos that are all taken in the same light / same subject / etc. (like in my recent sidewalk chalk post) then I do batch-process in Lightroom.

Because I use Lightroom, I don’t use any actions, but I do use presets, and I pretty much always use my own that I’ve developed over the past year. I would love to try out some actions one of these days – I definitely don’t see anything wrong with manipulating images!! – but I still use Photoshop Elements, and I’m going to wait until I can purchase CS4 (or whatever the latest version is) before I start playing with actions.

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Okay, phew. That’s all of the questions I saw … if I missed one, please let me know! And thanks – that was fun!! I’ll have to do that again soon. :)

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So I’m going to try answering some of the questions from this post (and if you missed it and want to ask me something, please feel free to do it here!)

Megan asked …

My questions are about newborns since that is clearly on my mind (and bladder, ribs, pelvis). What was the most challenging part of having a newborn in your life for the first time and what was the most wonderful thing?

Well, since Megan is already holding her hunka hunka burnin’ love, I’m sure she’s already figuring it all out and becoming a total expert. And if I remembered everything about the newborn stage, I probably wouldn’t be pregnant right now. I kid, I kid!! (Sort of)

The most challenging part for me was definitely our breastfeeding issue. I’ve never really talked about it here, but Emma never nursed. It’s a long story filled with many lactation consultant visits, a consultation with an oral motor therapist, minor surgery to correct tongue tie, and lots of pumping and crying (both of us) and beating myself up. In the end, we made the decision to go to formula, but it was still very hard to let that go without feeling terrible guilt.

Of course, the most wonderful thing was her. Staring at her. Snuggling her. Dressing her. Bathing her. Feeding her. Even changing diapers was an absolute dream. I loved every little thing about her, and once she was here, I wondered how I made it so long without her. (Doesn’t hurt that she was truly one of the easiest babies ever.)

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Sara asked …

If you could pick one spot in your house that is your favorite spot to photograph your little one… where is it? & Why?

This is so funny, because I just noticed a couple of weeks ago how much I love the light in our master bathtub. It’s natural light that comes in from a large window right above the tub, and then the tub is white surrounded by white walls. So it makes the most beautiful reflective light.

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But I obviously can’t put her in the bathtub every time I want to take a picture of her, so I just try to take pictures pretty much anywhere that I get a lot of light. We are very fortunate to have large windows in all of our rooms, so I can get a decent picture almost anywhere.

Having said that, I rarely “pose” Emma to take pictures … so if she’s playing in her playroom or helping me in the kitchen or jumping on her bed, I just try to use whatever light I have to get the shot. If I actually try to set her up for a picture, then we go outside.

Diana / Meme asked …

Do you delete photos after you upload and only keep the best/good ones? I take so many shots of something. upload and end up keeping all in my photos. I wondered if you know exactly which ones to delete or if you are like me and think you can crop, enhance, do whatever to any picture so you keep them all??

SUCH a good question! This is something I really struggled with until I started shooting in RAW format and purchased Lightroom. I used to save every picture I ever took, but then I started running out of room on my computer. And our server. And our backup server. So I had to start cutting WAY back on the number of photos I kept.

Once I got Lightroom and started using it as my catalog, that’s when I really decided to keep only pictures that I would either post (on my blog or on Flickr) or print.

At first, it was really hard. But then I remembered the folders and folders and folders of photos that have never been touched, and I realized that even though I may say I’m going to go back one day and edit all of those images, I barely have time to edit the current ones. So … I became the deleting queen. And it’s VERY easy to do in Lightroom, so that made it a lot easier. (Oooh, a tutorial idea – thanks!)

As far as deciding which ones to keep, I am an impulse deleter … if I can edit them in a few clicks, then they are keepers. If they are going to require a lot of work (too under/over-exposed, blurry, etc.) then I trash them. If I end up with a lot of duplicate images, then I keep my favorite one and delete the rest.

I had to learn to let go of that “connection” with every single image that I upload. Once I learned how to do that, the rest was fairly painless.

Jess asked …

How many photographs do you think you’ll take of the new baby each day? Just an average guesstimate is fine :P

Ha!!!! I have a sneaky feeling I won’t be able to take as many photographs as I would like … I hear having a newborn with a toddler in the house keeps a momma pretty stinkin’ busy. ;) But I’ll do my best to get at least one every day.

Joanna asked …

1. What is your dream lens?
2. What happened to the good ol’ Olympus?
3. How are you liking your 50d?
4. What are your favourite actions/textures?

Oooh, good questions, Jo!

1. My dream lens? I don’t know! I know that sounds terrible, but I really love the two that I have right now (Canon 85mm 1.8 & 50mm 1.8) but at the same time, I would like to have a zoom lens of some sort, because I miss being able to take pictures of certain things (like the condo rooms where we stayed in Florida or rooms in my house), and I’d like to one day have a wide-angle lens for landscape/urban shots. A fisheye would be fun. I’d also like a Lensbaby. So I don’t think I currently own my “dream” lens, but I’m not sure what it would be. Any recommendations?

2. The good ol’ Olympuses (I have 2!) are still with me. I have the E-300, which was my first DSLR ever, and I also have the E-520. I’m planning on donating the E-300 with the kit lens to someone or an organization in need. But for now, I’m keeping the E-520 as a backup, and I still use the Zuiko 50mm macro that I have for it since my Canon 50mm isn’t a macro.

3. I love my Canon 50D! Seriously all caps L.O.V.E. it. I rented a 5D Mark II when I was looking, but in the end, the 50D was what we could afford without going into debt – I thought I’d miss the Mark II, but I really love what my camera does, especially in low light situations, which was the one serious issue I always had with my Olympus. So far, the 50D has not disappointed me at all.

4. I don’t use actions but I love both sets of Florabella textures. I also use and love Patti Brown’s Kaleidoscope textures – they create an entirely different mood than Florabella, so it’s nice to have the variety. One of these days, I would love to try Beth Armsheimer’s textures – I’ve heard and seen amazing things from those, as well.

Mimi asked …

Yes Keli, I would like to know how you lick your elbow! Seems an impossible feat to me :)

Okay, I don’t really know HOW I do it … but I can. I think it has something to do with my shoulders being double-jointed?

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Angie (who has a gorgeous picture in the new I Heart Faces website banner, btw!!) asked …

i am with joanna! what are your favorites?! lenses, actions, textures, photography website!

lenses/actions/textures – see above

Photography website – why, I Heart Faces, of course! ;) Actually, I do love I Heart Faces (I wouldn’t be a contributor there if I didn’t) but other than that, I adore Flickr. I’ve met so many amazing photographers on there, some of who I call my dearest friends. And then I have a seriously HUGE list of photographer blogs that I love, and there is no way I could list them all here, but among my favorites are Beth Armsheimer (I want to be her one day), Jasmine Star, Sheye Rosemeyer, and Simply Rosie. I also know like a gajillion photographers who are personal friends that I truly adore and constantly gather inspiration from, but if I tried listing them, I’d end up missing someone and hurting feelings.

I also enjoy constant inspiration from Shutter Sisters and The Maternal Lens.

Mrs. Soup asked …

1) How did you get to be so awesome?
2) How much do you love me?
3) If you could live anywhere in the world, where would it be?
4) You are given a $50 gift card to anywhere and you HAD to purchase something for yourself and only for yourself. Where would it be for and what would you buy?

I was born that way.

A whole whole whole lot.

Where I live. No, seriously! I really do love living in South Carolina, and I think I’d miss it if I moved somewhere else. But places I’ve enjoyed visiting that could maybe beckon me away one day … Maui, Hawaii or Santa Fe, NM.

Oh this is so tough. Probably a pair of white Converse. I have a black pair that I love, but I really really want a white pair for spring & summer. Or two pedicures. Or maybe if I finagle on eBay, I could get a pair of Converse AND a pedicure. Awwww man, now I want $50.

I am going to have to come back and answer the rest of the questions later. I wanted to get them all in one post, but I have a ton of things to do today, and I know I won’t get around to it. Plus, the last few are photography-related and I want to be thorough.

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I’ve never taken a class or read a book about Photoshop.

I do watch YouTube videos of PS tutorials and also read blogs and online tutorials.

But I’ve never upgraded past Photoshop Elements 5.0.

In other words, you don’t necessarily need professional quality programs to have a professional looking image.

But here’s my disclaimer: if you’re looking to become a professional photographer, a basic knowledge of GOOD editing programs is a must. And I firmly believe in hiring a professional to work up some branding & logos for you, unless you’re really good at that sort of thing.

ANYWAY … if you’re looking for a basic way to protect your images, then this is the tutorial for you.

Creating and Saving a Photoshop Brush Watermark

I discussed creating a watermark here, but I’m going to go ahead and go over that again with the addition of saving it to have everything in one neat and tidy tutorial.

Also, I have since changed my watermark, because I, personally, felt weird having the word “photography” included when I’m not a professional photographer. Just personal preference there.

Step 1: create new file (I started with 800px X 800px just to make sure I’d have a nice big file)

Step 2: type whatever you want (all brushes are created grayscale, so use black #000000)

step1and2

Step 3: whenever you have the text or image or text & image combo that you want, do a fairly tight crop

step3

Step 4: go to “select all” (or type CTRL-A), then go to “edit – define brush from selection”

step4

Step 5: name your brush

step5

At this very second, you can use it as a brush, but it’s currently hanging out in limbo in the brush category where you created it. If you want a special “watermark” folder for this brush, you need to go ahead and save it before you lose it.

Step 6: go to the brush drop-down menu and click on the >> and then select “preset manager”

step6

Step 7: select the brush that you want to save (if you have more than one brush that you would like to use as a watermark [like I do], then select all of those brushes and click “save set”)

step7

Step 8: name the set whatever you want – I super creatively named mine “watermarks.abr”

step8

note: the folder will be located under C:\Program Files\Adobe\Photoshop Elements 5.0\Presets\Brushes (or whatever program you have)

Step 9: click on “done”

step9

Step 10: use your new brush / watermark!

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Now, a couple of things to mention …

• Even though you created your watermark using black #000000, you can change it to whatever color you would like once you are finished. After you select the brush you want to use, just set the foreground color to whatever you would like before you “brush” it onto the image.

• You can change the size and opacity of the brush to suit your needs, but you need to do that before you “brush” the watermark onto the image. Once you “brush” it, you can’t change anything. You may have to “undo” a couple of times to get it right, but I usually aim for opacity around 20-30% depending on the image.

• The fonts I used in this brush are the ever popular Fonts for Peas found at Kevin and Amanda Fonts – the text is “Pea Frankie” and the heart is “Pea Bethany’s Doodles.” Please follow the rules when it comes to using free fonts you find online.

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