![]() It’s designed to help you through a few basic steps from opening up Lightroom for the first time, making two basic edits, and exporting (saving) a final version of your picture. I wrote this Beginner’s Guide to Lightroom to help you, and I wish I would have had something like this when I first got started. If you are new to Lightroom and don’t know where to start, or have thought about using it but feel overwhelmed, then please know I feel your pain, and know where you’re coming from. At first I found it difficult to use and not really intuitive, but I soon found my way around and I was a Lightroom convert. But in the spring of 2014, when it was announced that Apple was no longer supporting Aperture, I decided to make the leap to Lightroom. To continue reading, please sign in, or sign up for a membership today.I had tried Lightroom in the past, but always preferred using Apple’s Aperture photo editing program. You’ll find the controls in the Edit panel of Lightroom (the newer cloud-based app, until recently called Lightroom CC) and the Develop module in Lightroom Classic, depending on which version you use. Most photo editing programs offer similar options, but I’m focusing just on the two current versions of Lightroom for this article. In Lightroom and Lightroom Classic, you’ll find multiple methods of making photos black and white and fine-tuning the appearance for the look you want. Converting a color photo to black and white isn’t just a matter of removing the color saturation, however. ![]() Now, of course, we can create the effect easily in software. Even long after color did become the norm, black and white remains a popular artistic choice. Making photos black and white is a separate treatment today, but for much of the history of photography, it was the only option-color film first didn’t existent, and then was often too expensive for most people to process.
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