![]() Almost every photographer owns one or the other of these or they can be acquired very inexpensively. For a catalogue of finished/portfolio TIFF or jpeg images and an export tool for web and print, Aperture or an old copy of Lightroom 4 work well. There’s a separate functionality in a DAM besides ingesting and culling: managing a photographic portfolio. I developed the RAW + JPEG workflow as I also shoot Fuji sometimes and FRV does a very poor job with Fuji RAW. RAW also works fine, it’s just the time switching between images can be felt while with jpeg previews switching is near instantaneous. Personally I most often shoot RAW and jpeg and configure FRV to show the jpeg as preferred preview as I usually get exposure right and it’s faster to check focus on full size jpegs. If you search for FastRawViewer, I’ve posted quite a bit on how FRV obviates any real need for a DAM on the front end within PhotoLab. The core of it is to cull your files before moving to PhotoLab and to move only your selects to a subfolder. I’ve posted my step by step workflow with FastRawViewer. I’m an every day FastRawViewer and PhotoLab user. I would like to read your opinion on the advantage of using it. I can manage 200 pictures from a portrait shoot in Exposure, but a wedding or a large shoot with over 500 images will first be processed in FastRawViewer.Someone from our forum has integrated FastRawViewer into their workflow with PhotoLab 2? I’ve been using it for the last 2 years and will continue to use it even after migrating from Lightroom to Exposure X3. ![]() That way in Exposure, I can further enhance maybe 500 images from a wedding instead of 2000.įor me $20 for a piece of software that will save me hours in processing a wedding is a no-brainer. I can do further culling in Exposure X3, but the point is to delete all the unusable pictures from the shoot. With this setup I will need 1-2 seconds a picture to decide if it’s in or out. Right click and send them to _Reject folder which the software will create for me. To set the auto-advance feature, click the options cogwheel on the XML Metadata panel and set it there.Īfter that I select all images with no rating. Right hand is basically only there to move the mouse pointer to the eyes of my subjects so that the Z key can zoom right into them to check. The keys X, C, and V advance the image automatically once the rating of 1, 2 or 0 are applied, so I don’t have to click the arrow keys with my right hand. To see if the previous one was not better V – advance without giving a rating – practically reject. ![]() For me these are the top 10 images from the shoot usually
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