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Working with Snapshots in Lightroom Classic and Photoshop

In the video below, you’ll discover when and why you would want to create and work with Snapshots in Lightroom Classic and Photoshop. 

10 Little Known Tips for Working with Tools in Photoshop

This is a bit of a mash-up of ten tool tips and shortcuts, but I find them to be very helpful and wished that I had discovered them when first learning Photoshop!

Twenty Tips for Working with Lightroom Classic

In this action packed video, you can watch and learn as Julieanne reveals 20 of her favorite tips, shortcuts, and techniques for working with Lightroom Classic in just under 22 minutes! You’ll discover little known features and hidden gems that will enable you to save valuable time when importing photographs, increase your productivity when culling shoots and, elevate your creativity when editing photos.

Adobe Lightroom Classic

Working with Undo, the History Panel, History and Art History Brushes in Photoshop

When most people think of the History panel in Photoshop, they think of multiple undo. The History panel, however, in conjunction with the History Brush, Art History Brush, Snapshots, Eraser, and Fill Command is far more powerful then simply traveling back through time in your document. Let’s see how they can help us to make the most our of the past, present, and future in Photoshop!

Adobe Photoshop

Lightroom Mobile -Discover the Power of Versions (IGTV)

In this episode of #LrInsiderTips on IGTV, Adobe Evangelist @jkost demonstrates how to use Versions in Lightroom mobile to “capture” all of the settings applied to an image and save them as a single “state”. You can then experiment with different settings and effects with the security of knowing that you can quickly return to a previous Version with a single tap.

Adobe Lightroom Mobile

3, 2, 1, Photoshop! Seven Ways to Get the Most out of the History Panel

Here are seven ways to help you get the most out of the History panel in Photoshop.

Adobe Photoshop

The Fill Command in Photoshop

While I expect that many of you already know the shortcuts to fill with the Foreground and background colors, did you also know that your can fill with History, fill non-transparent areas, and a combination of both?

Adobe Photoshop