BRIAN WORLEY
With fast frame continuous shooting rates and the almost endless capacity of memory cards it’s all too easy to capture large numbers of photos, but this means of a lot of editing. It doesn’t matter if you shoot RAW or JPEG, recipes simplify the edit workflow. Edit one image, and apply the edits to multiple similar shots. Saving recipes with preferred image styles brings speed and consistency.
The number of photos we take has vastly increased compared to the past, making a much harder task to refine and edit all the shots. Maybe you took 10 shots to capture the best action grabbing frame or mashed down the shutter and took 20 when the bird flew straight at you resulting in lots of RAW images to process.
DPP stores each edit you do to a photo as a recipe. This recipe is completely detailed down to spot removal, selective area adjustment and slight rotation of the frame. Every time you edit an image in DPP, it updates the recipe for the shot, and allows you to use it to process multiple shots. Recipes got more powerful in recent years with the ability to choose which elements of the recipe to apply to other shots.
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The Art of Copying Art - James Paterson shows you how to use your Canon gear to capture artwork and paintings the right way with simple camera and lighting skills
Whether you want to capture a painting like the above, digitise old prints or reproduce any kind of canvas, there's real skill in capturing artwork with your camera. Not only do you need the colours to be accurate, you also need to master the spread, angle and quality of the light to minimise glare and show the work at its best.This painting by the artist Bryan Hanlon has a wonderfully subtle colour palette. To reproduce the painting in print and digital form, it needs to be captured in the right way.
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