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	<title>Comments on: Can You Make Pinkberry Look Better?</title>
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	<link>http://paulmobley.com/2009/08/07/can-you-make-pinkberry-look-better/</link>
	<description>by Paul Mobley, MBA</description>
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		<title>By: Danny Kern</title>
		<link>http://paulmobley.com/2009/08/07/can-you-make-pinkberry-look-better/comment-page-1/#comment-107</link>
		<dc:creator>Danny Kern</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Aug 2009 04:32:16 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>Hey Paul,

Thanks for getting back in touch. I like what you&#039;ve done with your blog. I also am a big fan of the Canon G series - I shoot primarily with the G9 and almost 99% of my post-processing is done in Lightroom. Here is my typical Lightroom workflow and what I used on your image:
1. Import and convert RAW files to .DNG for archiving purposes.
2. Boosted exposure 1 stop and used highlight recovery 43.
3. Increased black clipping +7 to add contrast.
4. Clarity +44 for overall sharpness by increasing midtone contrast.
5. Vibrance +33 for midtone saturation.
6. Luminance noise reduction at 38 because Canon G series has high pixel density and gets noisy even at low ISO.
7. Sharpening at 100, 1.5 Radius, 18 Masking. Basic rule: Zoom to 100%, overdo it and then back off to see what looks good.
8. Somewhere along the way hit &#039;\&#039; key to toggle before image.
9. Also while you are zoomed in at 100% look at your highlight edges for weird colors that may have developed along the way. Defringed all edges and adjusted Blue and Red chromatic aberration.
10. Straightened 1.26 and cropped to remove branches around the edges. Also spot removed one remaining palm branch.
11. Vignetted cropped image by -100 and adjusted midpoint to taste.
12. Exported resized final image to JPG with sRGB colorspace. 

Let me know if you have any Lightroom questions and what you think about the image.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hey Paul,</p>
<p>Thanks for getting back in touch. I like what you&#8217;ve done with your blog. I also am a big fan of the Canon G series &#8211; I shoot primarily with the G9 and almost 99% of my post-processing is done in Lightroom. Here is my typical Lightroom workflow and what I used on your image:<br />
1. Import and convert RAW files to .DNG for archiving purposes.<br />
2. Boosted exposure 1 stop and used highlight recovery 43.<br />
3. Increased black clipping +7 to add contrast.<br />
4. Clarity +44 for overall sharpness by increasing midtone contrast.<br />
5. Vibrance +33 for midtone saturation.<br />
6. Luminance noise reduction at 38 because Canon G series has high pixel density and gets noisy even at low ISO.<br />
7. Sharpening at 100, 1.5 Radius, 18 Masking. Basic rule: Zoom to 100%, overdo it and then back off to see what looks good.<br />
8. Somewhere along the way hit &#8216;\&#8217; key to toggle before image.<br />
9. Also while you are zoomed in at 100% look at your highlight edges for weird colors that may have developed along the way. Defringed all edges and adjusted Blue and Red chromatic aberration.<br />
10. Straightened 1.26 and cropped to remove branches around the edges. Also spot removed one remaining palm branch.<br />
11. Vignetted cropped image by -100 and adjusted midpoint to taste.<br />
12. Exported resized final image to JPG with sRGB colorspace. </p>
<p>Let me know if you have any Lightroom questions and what you think about the image.</p>
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