The photo businesses (DWP and Lightsmith Imaging) are both going gangbusters. In fact, it's getting harder and harder to find the time to work on my ever-increasing crush of unfinished customer projects. I have been trying to streamline my workflow wherever possible. Sometimes small changes can make a big difference.
Post-processing of images represents probably my biggest time black-hole, so I am always looking for new and better software to help me out. Lightroom has really sped up my processing compared to having to pop every picture into Photoshop. In fact, I probably process 90% of my photos entirely in Lightroom now, only going into Photoshop for the big edits. I can process 800 photos from a wedding in an hour or so now, something that used to take a day. Upgrading my storage system to a single Drobo capable of 16TB also helped as I don't have to constantly move files around in an ever-expanding galaxy of hard drives.
One particular challenge has eluded me until now. Designing wedding albums and other large projects with complicated layouts. I have tried all kinds of different ways to speed up these jobs up but I always went back to Photoshop, which does a fantastic job but requires boatloads of time to create each page.
But recently I have switched over to using a publishing program called Adobe InDesign, the same software used to create magazine and book layouts all over the world. Funny that I never considered trying that software before, looking at the similarities between wedding albums and magazine layouts. But I tried it this week after watching a video online that showed a photographer creating an album with it. And I'm so glad I did because it works fantastically. I only had to use the demo for one project before I was hooked. I bought it the same day. Creating album layouts with InDesign is a fast, accurate, creative process. And the whole wedding album can be in one file. Photos are linked back to Photoshop so you can go back for changes, which auto-update back into InDesign. It just...works.
This approach already easily cuts album design in half for me, and that's counting the learning curve, it will be even faster when I master the program. It's like a light went on. Huge, huge difference in efficiency. Worth every penny.
Here's an example...a fragment of a tutorial for applying rounded corners to a photo in Photoshop. It really illustrates the difference in these two programs when doing page layouts:
"Ever want to make your photos or drawings more elegant-looking by having rounded corners? Here's how to do it in 12 easy steps..."
Twelve steps! It's a one-step process in InDesign and you can apply it to the whole project all at once if you like.
So I learned something this week. And yet, the search goes on for better and faster ways of doing things...I'm thinking of trying out a track ball as a replacement for my mouse because I can't find a mouse that really works well for me.
2 comments:
I can appreciate what you're saying. Ever since I got my new computer almost a year ago I've been using Photoshop which I am light years from mastering and I had to replace the program I use for graphics, cards, albums. I'm LOST. There is so much I used to do that I can't now...aren't things supposed to get better with upgrading?
P.S. I love the album page you chose to illustrate your point! My son and daughter in law are lovely! And I just got an email from her telling me how much they LOVE the album!
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