View allAll Photos Tagged workflows
A concept for arranging groups in various configurations based on what the group faces in terms of its work--sometimes, in heavy development, insulating a member from the 'noise'; at other times, various members get the focus, and at yet other times, everyone is equally engages and collaborating.
C = Customer
QA = Quality Assurance
AM = Account Manager
PM = Project Manager
D = Developer
The full workflow has six steps in four stages.
The first stage is the camera work with the pre-shoot and shooting work. Here I select the location, prepare camera and lenses and other gear. The location part includes camera settings and post-shoot the equipment care (cleaning, re-charging, etc.).
The second stage consists of the preparation and conditioning of the images. This is the first stage on the computer, here I transfer the files, view and rate them. The files selected for editing are copied to suitable working directory to keep the camera files intact. In this stage also the compositing takes place for multi-shot panoramas and HDR images. The compositing produces TIF files for the editing stage that otherwise works on camera raw files.
The third stage is the editing (primarily in CNX) to create the final image. Here I perform all the digital post-processing work, color and constrast adjustments, sharpening, correction of lens defects and various sorts of fine-tuning.
The last stage is the publication process that often includes a resize (for web) or color profile conversions. With a final uploading to Flickr or print services.
Proper culling workflow in Adobe Lightroom can save you time, sanity and improve your portfolio. Learn how to do it right.
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Reprocessing old target, Pixinsight workflow with multiscale gradient correction instead of background extraction.
Desktop with lists.
I took this because it is typical of what *we* have (information) on the physical desktop when do things.
Notice the lists of things todo on the desktop, wall.
please note: simple invites to post an image to a particular group are always welcome but no pictures, awards, or badges in comments. i call it dumping on the lawn. thanks very much for understanding, and I sincerely appreciate your visits.
for those interested in iphonography, the itemization of the workflow used for the images in this series might prove helpful.
oh, and i've created a group for black and white images. you might wanna join.
The overall workflow of BioAutomata.
This figure is associated with CABBI’s Year 2 Summary Narrative.
Figure courtesy of Mohammad HamediRad, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.