Note: We’ve got two hangouts next week Lightroom is Thursday with Scott Kelby and Business with Justin and Mary Marantz on Wednesday.
You gotta join us live for our next Google+ Hangout, totally free of charge. Not only will you learn terrific techniques, but if you tune in live, you can be entered to win a Creative Cloud subscription from Adobe, as well as some incredible tools from onOne Software (Note: MUST BE TUNED IN LIVE TO WIN).
We kick of Thursday 1/29, 1:00pm Eastern, 10:00am Pacific.
RSVP here and it’ll show your local time.
We highly recommend learning with Scott, and you can catch loads of his video lessons over at www.Kelbyone.com.
We’ll be broadcasting Live, and you can interact with Scott Kelby and get your questions answered as well as be entered in our raffle for some terrific prizes including Lightroom and Perfect Photo Suite9. See you there!
Brought to you by Songfreedom, Adobe, Drobo, and onOne Software.
The video will broadcast live right here, and be embedded here forever; but if you want to ask questions and be entered for a prize, you’ve gotta go to the G+ page here.
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NuQnDTkaKJU]
You can register for free here SIGN UP. To learn more about how Google Hangouts work, click here http://www.google.com/+/learnmore/hangouts/. Joining the hangout will let you ask questions and chat with attendees. The video will also stream above in this post.
Shireen Dallas is here. can’t post in on feed
I was on the LightRoom Book Hangout today which was so appreciated; however, I could not access the Q&A. So my question is in reference to color space/color profile and Blurb’s printing operation. How do we know what to expect in regard to colors being accurate. I understand from other tutorials that the chances are better using InDesign. While I know InDesign, I like the LR interface much better and the whole process seems much more efficient. Therefore, I’m more likely to do books. Thanks
Hi Linda, Thanks for tuning in! There is no way to softproof a book out of Lightroom. All color space conversions for output are done as part of the upload process to Blurb. That part of the equation is pretty much a black box in Lightroom, so you’ve got to just make the book and work from there. Generally speaking, if you have calibrated your monitor, and the images look good in Lightroom, they should look good in the book. I recommend Scott’s idea of starting with a 7×7 book with some sample images as a hard proof. If any… Read more »