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It is no secret that I am a big fan of Sean Bagshaw’s work – his images to me capture the wilderness as I know it, a thriving, living, symbiotic space – full of energy, vibrance, clarity and expression.

One of the most common questions I get in one to ones and workshops is “How can I get my images to look better?”

For those of us shooting Digital, I believe the days of the images coming out of the camera looking their best is over. A RAW file is just a starting point, and because the camera is recording a range of potential values, it is not expected to deliver a best guess at what the photographers final intention may be.

And here is a key point about contemporary photography – Your creative Process starts with a stimulus, seeing something that catches your eye that you can begin to visualise as a final print or web post.

This creative spark is the start, you then work around your subject eliminating clutter, clarifying your subject and begin to work on exposure and capture techniques. Is their dynamic range issues to overcome, what about depth of field? This is the marriage of Art & Craft – Harvesting Light with which you create your final image with later in Processing.

The Digital Darkroom is as vital a component as any of the other primary stages. Harvested Light is of little value if it is spat out the other side in a few seconds without a thought.

This series of Video Tutorials by Sean Bagshaw, take the viewer on a journey through the most essential features of Processing, from Lightroom/Camera Raw into Photoshop.

I recommend them to everyone I teach, as they are as essential to producing great images as a good eye or great light.

$44.99

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In the past I have written many articles referring to the Photoshop Actions of Tony Kuyper. These actions are to do with Luminosity Masks, which to my mind is the greatest processing Discovery of this decade.

However, many readers in the past have confessed that it is difficult to get their heads around such a complex concept, and I too admit that they take a little time to get the hang of, but the benefits are simply huge – some may even say life-changing.

A good friend of Tony’s – Sean Bagshaw, an extremely talented Landscape Photographer from Oregon, USA, has created a series of Instructional Videos that cover the whole theme of Luminosity Masks, and a number of more simple Photoshop Techniques, to deal with High Dynamic Range situations that are so common in Landscape Photography.

The Digital Download includes 29 video tutorials with over four and a half hours of content.

Starting simply by examining common scenarios, Sean leads you step by step through the basics, and as you gain confidence the techniques become more complex, yet explained in the same simple, easy to understand terms.

These videos will improve your Photoshop skills immensely, helping you to take better and better images and seeing opportunities in scenes you may have most likely walked away from in the past.

Essential for anyone serious about taking their processing and image-taking to a professional level.

Buy Now for $44:99

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Here is an example of a blend of 2 images for Extended Dynamic Range – including all the layers of adjustments.