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Some of the most significant changes in this version of Lightroom include: • The reintroduction and enhancement of Upright, a powerful distortion-correction tool; • Updated exporting tools that let you publish images straight to Facebook or Flickr, or export with all metadata on a per-image basis; • The addition of Photoshop-compatible plug-in support for on-demand HDR and panorama merging from within Lightroom.In this blog post we've shared some lowdown from the trenches on everything you need to know about the latest version of Adobe's photo editing juggernaut. You can download a free trial today to see for yourself! 9. November 19, 2015: Edited to show the new page. 2. December 2, 2015: edited to enclose the article start.Original Attachment has been moved to: Lightroom 5.3 64Bit Serial.zip Note that this attachment can be downloaded by forum members without logs under Category "General Discussion". See also "Off Topic" forum. This article shows how to use Lightroom 5.3 for Windows and Mac OS X: Download and install the latest version of the software. 1. Using Lightroom 5.3, find photos in your library that you want to edit (you may need to create a new collection to do this), then select them by clicking on an image or pressing Ctrl+A/Cmd+A, and drag them onto the dialog box at the bottom of the screen so they fill it horizontally. 2. In the right-hand pane of the dialog box, click on Curves and select Curves from the list. 3. In the left-hand pane of the dialog box, click on Hue/Saturation and select Hue/Saturation from the list. The preview window at the bottom of the screen shows you a colored version of your photo in color and black and white, respectively. As you use either slider in this window to adjust your hue or saturation, a small preview at top-left changes in real time to show you what your photo will look like after adjusting that setting. 4. In the right-hand pane of the dialog box, click on Shadows and select White Balance from the list. The preview window at the bottom of the screen shows you a colored version of your photo in color and black and white, respectively. As you use either slider in this window to adjust your white point (or midpoint), a small preview at top-left changes in real time to show you what your photo will look like after adjusting that setting. 5. Above this, click on Color and select Saturation from the list. The preview window at the bottom of the screen shows you a colored version of your photo in color and black and white, respectively. eccc085e13
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