Added: 6 months ago
From: smithfineart
Views: 2,764
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  • @smithfineart Thanks for this amazing tutorial. Could you talk a bit about how you lit the original image?

    Thanks!!

  • @chauncyprod It has been awhile, but if I remember, it was pretty simple lighting. I used a large softbox camera left, and a couple of speed lights behind to blow out the background. Other then then it was just getting the right ratio to make it all look right.

  • @themacguy2k Love that. Thanks a million!

  • Can you list the plug-ins and actions you use. I'm having trouble finding them. Thanks for the great video.

  • hi nathan, great aperture tutorials! thanks alot! i like aperture more than lightroom, capture one pro or nikons capure nx2 but somehow i'm still missing the lens correction of adobe's raw converter. do you have any clue how i can add this to my workflow? i was thinking about some apple script or automator? do you do any lens correction to your photos? i'm shooting with a d7000 + 35mm 1.8. greetings from germany (sorry for my bad english ;) )

  • @schmatti89 - Thanks of the comment! When I need lens correction I simply pop the photo over to Photoshop CS5 and use it in there. There are also some plug-ins for lens correction that will work in aperture. Google "lens correction aperture" for some results. The first site on the list is apple's resource page for Aperture 3. Worst case.. you can always use Adobe camera RAW or LR if you have those at your disposal for just a few photos, then put a 16-bit tiff back into aperture. Good luck.

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