Quick Tip: Why You Should Consider Lightroom

Photoshop is the most powerful photo manipulation software ever made. Nearly every designer and photographer around the world relies upon Adobe’s design software for some aspect of their work. But today I’m going to make the case for choosing Lightroom over Photoshop. You might just find that it becomes your best friend.


Comprehensive Interface

Lightroom has a comprehensive interface where things aren’t hidden (yet manages not to feel crowded). If you take a look at Lightroom’s home screen, you’ll find that all your photos, adjustments and options are right in front of you rather than being hidden in complex menu entries.


Built-in Photo Organizer

Lightroom is also a photo organizer. In Photoshop, you can indeed open multiple files and manipulate/edit them simultaneously, but it doesn’t have any photo organizer built-in. Lightroom, on the other hand, has a full-featured photo organizer that enables you to view and manage all the images on your computer.


Dedicated Develop Center

Lightroom has a dedicated “Develop” center. Take a flashback to the era of film cameras where the photographer had to develop the photographs in a dark room by applying various chemicals. Adobe has maintained the legacy, bringing you into a digital development center for your photographs. Equally useful, but far less fiddly!


Before and After Comparisons

For a photographer, it is imperative to view how a photograph looks before and after a particular effect is applied. In Photoshop, there is no dedicated before and after shortcut. Lightroom makes this side-by-side comparison easy.


Non-Destructive Editing

Everything you do in Lightroom is done virtually. Every enhancement, every brush stroke you make – every adjustment is virtual and you can reverse it at any point of time. Some people relate this to the layers feature of Photoshop. Let me tell you, this is completely different.

Suppose you enhanced one of your images in Photoshop. Now, in order to reverse the effects, you can just Undo it. But only while Photoshop is running. The moment you exit the program with/without saving your work, Photoshop forgets what all was there.

But Lightroom doesn’t. And here comes this awesome and handy feature. It doesn’t matter if you exit Lightroom or even shut your computer down. Lightroom remembers everything, and you can reverse it at any point of time. All your originals remain intact and you can export your edited photographs from Lightroom whenever you feel like.


Better Export Options

Since Photoshop is not solely for Photographers, it comes with the burden of many, often irrelevant, export options. But with Lightroom, you’re presented with a more useful set:

  • Group photographs to export in a single folder
  • Use recurring file names to avoid confusion
  • Burn images to DVD directly
  • Export as .dng files
  • Apply user presets to the export options

  • It’s About Being Appropriate

    At the end of the day, Photoshop is a perfectly good tool for all your photography needs. It includes (almost) every feature of Lightroom, and is immensely powerful. If you’re looking for something that’s more specific to your needs as a photographer, and makes the whole post-processing workflow simpler and more appealing, Lightroom is absolutely worth checking out.

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What is a Dream Job?

We are always rolling the idea of a “dream job” around in our heads. Whether you’re sagging your head on a slow workday or sweating bullets during a hectic one, thoughts of your perfect job will cross your mind. What is a “dream job” anyway? It’s different for everyone, but it usually comes to us as an ever-changing counterpoint to our current job: If you’re bored by your current job, you dream of an active, fulfilling one. If you’re overloaded with work, you dream of a slower, simpler workday. If you have no autonomy at your current job, you dream of being an entrepreneur empowered with control over your own destiny.

But, despite all of these passing, changing thoughts, few of us have paused and allowed our dream job the consideration it deserves. Ask yourself: Have you given any real thought or definition to your dream job? Would you recognize it if you saw it? Would you be ready to pursue it if it appeared? If you struggle with any of the answers, perhaps you should stop, sit down, and give the matter your full attention.

Make it “Tailor Made” and “Built to Last”

First, be honest with yourself. Don’t just regurgitate some generic version of an ideal job to yourself. Those clichéd versions of dream jobs are certainly not for everyone: Would you be ready for the punishing daily workouts and strict diet of a pro athlete? Would you enjoy getting up at 3:30 am seven days a week as a news anchor? Would you really want to be a rock star if you have stage fright? Probably not. So, instead of grabbing a shrink-wrapped “dream job” off the shelf or cobbling disjointed fragments like “high pay” and “lots of travel” together, think it all the way through.

Second, Don’t let short-term events have too much of an influence on your version of “the perfect job.” The question is not “how could your week be better?,” it’s “how could your career be better.” If this week was stressful, it doesn’t mean that your “dream job” is being a yoga instructor. If you struggled with some unbearable clients and coworkers recently, it doesn’t mean that your ideal job is void of all interpersonal contact. You’ll need a long-term perspective to envision your true dream job.

Dreaming of Being The Boss?

Many quickly conclude that they want to be an executive of some sort. They see all of the perks of the executive level, but they never see the hardship or risk involved in such a position. While you may want some more autonomy at your job, an executive might want less at his. An executive will never admit it, but they may be envious of those in the company who have clear, distinct duties and a supervisor to make all of the difficult decisions.

I’m sure you want the big office and the expense account, but do you want the rest it as well?

Dreaming of Owning Your Own Business?

Many of us look around our current workplace and see a lot of room for improvement. We think: “This could be better. I would do things differently.” This naturally leads to visions of starting a similar business that runs flawlessly, complete with brilliant, happy employees, healthy profits and great prospects on the horizon. If you are going to take the plunge, it’s certainly a good vision to strive for. But, are you ready for the hurdles and headaches along the way? Starting a business can be seriously stressful. You have to put your whole livelihood (and your pride) on the line. If you fail as an employee, being fired is basically the worst-case scenario. But, if a business owner fails, they’re usually deep in debt, jobless, demoralized and reeling from the aftermath.

Starting your own business is a noble pursuit, but you have to pursue it wholeheartedly. Is it truly your “dream job”?

Dreaming of Doing Nothing?

At particularly stressful positions, the “dream job” becomes no job at all. If your workload is ballooning out of control and your duties barely fit into daylight hours, you might crave large amounts of downtime. This need for personal time can affect your idea of a “dream job” for obvious reasons; your ideal scenario is a blank schedule. The question is, is your dream job truly “nothing”?

A few days, or even a few weeks of “nothing” is almost always welcome. But, in larger doses it can be worse than your all-too-busy job. Gallup polls show that busy workers are generally more satisfied than bored ones. Boredom is also used as a punishment in prison. Are you sure you want a long, sustained period of “nothing to do”? Give it some real thought before you settle on “nothing” as your dream job.

Dream jobs don’t always miraculously appear, but you’ve got to be able to recognize yours if it does. Defining your dream job may yield a new understanding of your long-term plans and your career path. After all, it’s hard to know if you’re “going in the right direction” if you haven’t picked out a point on the horizon.

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