![]() It’s remarkably easy to use and other than LR occasionally picking out small cars and trees as relatives of mine, it’s pretty accurate at guessing who’s who. Of everything new, my students love the Facial Recognition feature. The “Quick Tips” playlist begins with creating custom naming templates and moves through 23 more videos demonstrating a variety of great tips including View Options, moving photos and printing multiple images on a single JPEG, which I do frequently with family photos. This is fantastic for users just getting started, covering importing and the Library in great depth which is one of the more challenging aspects of Lightroom. The “ Getting Started with Lightroom CC” playlist starts with an overview of the interface and goes on to 33 other short videos. She also covers panorama stitching, slide shows, face recognition and the hidden gems. ![]() In the “What’s New” playlist she starts with the new HDR feature, going into the options, step-by-step and fairly in depth. ![]() And, I get LR plus Photoshop CC for $120 a year while Photoshop alone, for example, costs $19.99 a month. There are some holdouts regarding using the Creative Cloud, but in the long run, I’ve found the Creative Cloud to be a great resource with a free Behance Pro site, access to fonts and 20GB of cloud storage. What’s the difference between Lightroom CC and Lightroom 6? Simply put, CC is the Adobe Creative Cloud and 6 is a DVD installation that comes in a retail box. But what is news, is that Adobe has just posted dozens of great, short videos introducing the new features of Lightroom CC and 6 from Julieanne Kost. Julieanne is in rare form as she demos this new version of Lightroom in small, bite-sized videos. I figured I wouldn’t be making much news by writing just another “announcement” blog post. ![]() Well, this isn’t news, but Lightroom CC and Lightroom 6 have been released. ![]()
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