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Sigo con interés tus videos sobre OM Workspace, que es un programa mucho más rico de lo que pensaba gracias a tus descubrimientos. Muchas gracias por el trabajo tan minucioso.
Thank you! As a subscriber, I have enjoyed and learned from your videos, but when you started doing the Workspace tutorials I was so pleased! I appreciate these particular videos so much as an Olympus em5mark3 user. I have underutilized Workspace because I simply did not fully understand how to do so, and can now see I have underestimated it’s utility - this will change now. Thank you, again!
Many thanks again Thomas! I have learned so much about this very powerful app, I really had underestimated it's capabilities until you started the tutorials. Fantastic 🙂!!
Great video Thomas! I'm already a fan of OM Workspace for techniques such as automatic focus stacking and focus analysing of image sequences, but you have really opened my eyes to the many other possibilities of this software with your Expert Guide Series. Many thanks from me, for all your considerable time and effort, in producing this high quality series of videos, very much appreciated.
Right colours make the difference, also in B&W photos. This lesson, combined with "WB & Color correction", are very very useful. Then, personal interpretation of single photographer makes the rest. I confess: I use vivid as picture mode. I'm birdwatcher and I find that this choice is realistic (and seems to me that I'm not alone). Sergio from Milano
Vivid is great - I'd say it is even suitable for skin tones, but Natural is a bit less heavy on the reds which can be good for certain portrait subjects. In any case, the Picture Modes are very well refined and OM color rendition is top notch in my oppinion!
Another wonderful clip, Thomas - thank you! I don't often do this, but I've noted the methods for when I do. I think the last was at a shallow lake (Lake Mulwala, an artificial lake) that had been drained to allow the sun to kill-off weed that lives on the bottom and fouls boat-propellers. I wanted something that spoke of bleak desolation and destruction so went for grainy black and white. Now I'm thinking some bleached color might not be a bad thing. And sincere congratulations on cracking the 10 kilosubscribers mark. Next stop...100k?😉😀
Thomas another excellent video! This one inspires me to try color grading in OM Workspace. I’ve not tried color grading in Lightroom yet even, mainly because I hadn’t really done any research to understand what color grading is, though I had an idea. But since I normally use Lightroom to catalog and edit my images, I’m a little afraid to point OM Workspace at my library and do anything with the images mainly because I don’t know what OM Workspace will do and I have tens of thousands of images. Is it a parametric image editor (PIE) or does it actually change data within the raw file? If it is a PIE, where does it save its editing information? Thanks again for all the work you do to produce these excellent educational videos. I’ll say again, OMDS should pay you for marketing their products (better than they do)!
Many thanks David! In a future video, I will talk about that in great detail. The short answer upfront: OM Workspace utilizes a separate database and does not alter the RAW files in terms of image data. You can of course edit the metadata. Workspace does not really create library, but browses the files where they are stored. So you can use both Lightroom and Workspace without any conflicts. I really appreciate your kind words, it means a lot - I think OM products have a lot to offer, and I love to share that here.
David Allen ahh great to hear! The good news - you can just use Workspace right now, it won't do any harm to your Lightroom library or the files on your drive
Your videos are excellent! I'm an experienced photographer but new to OM - probably would not have thought about OM Workspace if I didn't see your videos. After comparing it to other editors, I found the image quality to be better than Lightroom and equal to or better than Capture One and DxO Photolab. Although it is impressive, it is not as complete, and the sliders are somewhat slow (perhaps it is not running native on Apple M1), but it seems to be a good starting point.
Many thanks for the feedback! OM Workspace definitely can be a bit slower than other commercially available software, but as you've said, the results are well worth it. It is not necessary to perform all editing steps in Workspace - one can move the TIFF file to another program to finish the photo, for example. Best wishes!
📛 Become a channel member:
ruclips.net/user/thomaseislphotographyjoin
☕ Donate a coffee to support this channel:
ko-fi.com/thomaseislphotography
❓📩 Direct support:
thomaseisl.photography/shop/p/support-ticket
Sigo con interés tus videos sobre OM Workspace, que es un programa mucho más rico de lo que pensaba gracias a tus descubrimientos. Muchas gracias por el trabajo tan minucioso.
Thank you! As a subscriber, I have enjoyed and learned from your videos, but when you started doing the Workspace tutorials I was so pleased! I appreciate these particular videos so much as an Olympus em5mark3 user. I have underutilized Workspace because I simply did not fully understand how to do so, and can now see I have underestimated it’s utility - this will change now. Thank you, again!
Awesome, thank you! That is great to read, thanks for the feedback!
Many thanks again Thomas! I have learned so much about this very powerful app, I really had underestimated it's capabilities until you started the tutorials. Fantastic 🙂!!
Great to hear!
Great video Thomas! I'm already a fan of OM Workspace for techniques such as automatic focus stacking and focus analysing of image sequences, but you have really opened my eyes to the many other possibilities of this software with your Expert Guide Series. Many thanks from me, for all your considerable time and effort, in producing this high quality series of videos, very much appreciated.
Many thanks for the feedback!
Right colours make the difference, also in B&W photos. This lesson, combined with "WB & Color correction", are very very useful. Then, personal interpretation of single photographer makes the rest. I confess: I use vivid as picture mode. I'm birdwatcher and I find that this choice is realistic (and seems to me that I'm not alone). Sergio from Milano
Vivid is great - I'd say it is even suitable for skin tones, but Natural is a bit less heavy on the reds which can be good for certain portrait subjects.
In any case, the Picture Modes are very well refined and OM color rendition is top notch in my oppinion!
Appreciate the informative video!
Thank you!
Very informative video. I learnt a lot. Thank you. 🙏
So nice of you!
Hello Thomas another great video with tips for me to apply to my photo's kind regards Howard Rollinson
Wonderful, many thanks!
Another wonderful clip, Thomas - thank you! I don't often do this, but I've noted the methods for when I do. I think the last was at a shallow lake (Lake Mulwala, an artificial lake) that had been drained to allow the sun to kill-off weed that lives on the bottom and fouls boat-propellers. I wanted something that spoke of bleak desolation and destruction so went for grainy black and white. Now I'm thinking some bleached color might not be a bad thing. And sincere congratulations on cracking the 10 kilosubscribers mark. Next stop...100k?😉😀
Many thanks for the feedback and the kind words - 100k might take a while 😉
Yes, creating different looks in Workspace is definitely worth the effort.
Thomas another excellent video! This one inspires me to try color grading in OM Workspace. I’ve not tried color grading in Lightroom yet even, mainly because I hadn’t really done any research to understand what color grading is, though I had an idea. But since I normally use Lightroom to catalog and edit my images, I’m a little afraid to point OM Workspace at my library and do anything with the images mainly because I don’t know what OM Workspace will do and I have tens of thousands of images. Is it a parametric image editor (PIE) or does it actually change data within the raw file? If it is a PIE, where does it save its editing information? Thanks again for all the work you do to produce these excellent educational videos. I’ll say again, OMDS should pay you for marketing their products (better than they do)!
Many thanks David!
In a future video, I will talk about that in great detail. The short answer upfront: OM Workspace utilizes a separate database and does not alter the RAW files in terms of image data. You can of course edit the metadata. Workspace does not really create library, but browses the files where they are stored. So you can use both Lightroom and Workspace without any conflicts.
I really appreciate your kind words, it means a lot - I think OM products have a lot to offer, and I love to share that here.
@@ThomasEisl.Photography thanks for the reply! I’ll be looking for that video with keen interest and anticipation. Have a great day!
David Allen ahh great to hear! The good news - you can just use Workspace right now, it won't do any harm to your Lightroom library or the files on your drive
Your videos are excellent! I'm an experienced photographer but new to OM - probably would not have thought about OM Workspace if I didn't see your videos. After comparing it to other editors, I found the image quality to be better than Lightroom and equal to or better than Capture One and DxO Photolab. Although it is impressive, it is not as complete, and the sliders are somewhat slow (perhaps it is not running native on Apple M1), but it seems to be a good starting point.
Many thanks for the feedback!
OM Workspace definitely can be a bit slower than other commercially available software, but as you've said, the results are well worth it. It is not necessary to perform all editing steps in Workspace - one can move the TIFF file to another program to finish the photo, for example.
Best wishes!
L'étalonnage de lécran aussi , y fait beaucoup
Oui, il faut absolument travailler avec un écran calibré!
Schade, dass ein Wiener nicht deutsch spricht...
Ja, ich weiß - vielleicht gibt es mal einen deutschen Kanal als Ableger.
LG aus Wien