Photoshop CC Black Friday Deal

Update April 2014: $9.99 has become the “going rate” for the “Creative Cloud Photoshop Photography program”, which includes Photoshop and Lightroom. A Creative Cloud subscription also now gives you unlimited syncing from your desktop catalog to Lightroom mobile for the iPad. This new app and Lightroom may be justification enough for you for the $9.99/month price tag. If not, read on to see if you might get value out of receiving Photoshop CC as well.

Written 11/20/2013: With Adobe’s Current Black Friday sale on Photoshop CC + Lightroom,  I anticipate that a lot of photographers not currently using Photoshop are wondering if they should consider it. I am assuming for the sake of this article that you are already using Lightroom. The question here is, do you need Photoshop too?

There is certainly much that you can do in Photoshop that you can’t do in Lightroom. The key questions are, do you need or want to do enough of those things to justify the $19.99/month $9.99/month Photoshop CC price tag, and are you willing and able to invest the time and money to learn this complicated program?

I generally recommend that photographers learn Lightroom’s Develop tools well first, so that you appreciate fully what you can already do with Lightroom. Many people who have used Lightroom for years still haven’t explored or mastered all of its tools. (Of course an excellent way to learn them is with my Lightroom Fundamentals & Beyond video series.)

Amongst serious amateurs and pro’s, usage of Photoshop for photography purposes runs the full spectrum — some are completely satisfied with just using Lightroom (more and more with each new Lightroom release!), some take some percentage to Photoshop to do more complicated work, and others take all their photos to Photoshop to do more complicated work or to use actions they have built or purchased. I personally take about 5% of my straight photographs to Photoshop to do work I can’t do in Lightroom. I also use Photoshop for creative compositing. Let me be clear that if you decide not to add Photoshop to your toolkit, it doesn’t mean that you aren’t serious about your photography — Lightroom is very powerful by itself.

Here are My Top 11 Reasons Why You May Want or Need Photoshop

1. Complicated Object Removal & Movement

Lightroom’s spot removal tool is more powerful than a lot of people think (the second video on this page will teach you how to use it), particularly with the addition in Lightroom 5 of the click-and-drag brush capability, but it still has significant limitations — to cover something up, you have to have a clean source in your image to draw from. Photoshop has “content aware” functionality — it can analyze the area around what you’re removing, and intelligently make up new information to fill the fix area in.

Removing this telephone pole took less than a minute:

photoshop-object-removal

You also have more tools available to help you with object removal — the patch tool, for example. Finally, you can copy in elements from another photo to cover up problems — watch my video on swapping eyes and heads to see how.

2. Sophisticated Retouching

The Liquify tool in Photoshop is very popular in retouching, for the big tasks of making people or parts of them thinner or more defined, but also for more subtle work, such as enhancing cheek bones and eyes. Photoshop also allows you to very quickly and more precisely select and make changes to faces and skin, and has many other tools that professional retouchers use as well. (We have all seen the fashion magazine examples — you can go all the way towards this, or make more subtle changes.)

That said, if all you need to do is get rid of some zits, brighten and whiten teeth and the whites of eyes, make the eyes pop with come saturation and clarity, saturate lips, soften skin, and/or reduce the appearance of circles under eyes and wrinkles, all of this can be done in Lightroom, with the spot removal tool and adjustment brush. (Here’s a video tutorial on the adjustment brush.)

Here’s an example of basic retouching with just Lightroom (a bit overdone — retouching oneself can get addicting!):

lightroom-retouching

I would put photo restoration under this category as well — you can do some basic cleanup and color work with Lightroom, but when the going gets tough, you will need a more powerful tool.

3. Complicated Selections

I use Lightroom’s adjustment brush all the time to make local changes to photos, and when I need to affect something up against an edge, I turn on its auto-mask functionality, which protects me from spilling over the edge. This tool therefore allows me to make some pretty complicated selections. However, auto mask’s edge is very abrupt (there is no feathering control), so if I am making a dramatic change, the result is sometimes too obviously fake. In addition, auto mask does not work well next to fine detail, such as hair. Here’s an example of where I used auto mask to affect the background around my head. I can get away with it if I darken the background, but not if I brighten it up more than subtly:

Lightroom Adjustment Brush Limitations

Limitations of Lightroom’s Adjustment Brush Auto Mask Feature

Photoshop, on the other hand, has very powerful tools to make complicated selections, with a lot of control over edges. It takes time to build the skills to make selections such as this, but it is doable.

4. Merging Multiple Exposures with HDR

When I am photographing a scene with a lot of contrast — very bright areas and very dark areas, I will often bracket my exposures and merge them automatically with Photoshop’s HDR Pro feature. This is not possible in Lightroom. (You could instead by Photomatix or another HDR plug-in.)

photoshop-hdr-example

Three Bracketed Exposures and the Final Merged Photo (Right)

5. Merging Photos into a Panorama

If you have a very wide scene that you can’t capture in one photo, or want to make a very high-resolution photo by stitching together several of pieces of your scene, you will need Photoshop or another program to merge them.

photoshop-panorama

 

6. Photoshop CC’s New Camera Shake-Reduction Filter

This new filter sharpens photos that are blurry due to camera movement during the exposure. It is on its first iteration and has its limitations, but it gives us some hope of saving blurry photos, for at least low-resolution usage (photo courtesy of Adobe.com):

Photoshop CC Camera Shake Reduction Filter

 

7. Wide Angle Perspective Correction

I debated whether to put this new feature in the list, as whether this one matters to you will depend on what kind of shooting you do. Shooting with a wide angle lens can really distort the size and shape of objects up close. If it is important to you to correct this, it cannot be done in Lightroom. Here’s an example – notice in the before shot how wide the side table next to the sofa is, how distorted the vase is, and how long the TV and stand appear, compared to the after.

photoshop-adaptive-wide-angle

Before and After Adaptive Wide Angle Lens Correction

8. Creative Compositing

Whether you wish to simply put one photo on top of another and blend them, or take an object out of one photo and put it in another, this is a task for Photoshop.

Photoshop Compositing

9. Applying Artistic Filters

The closest thing Lightroom has to artistic filters is negative clarity, which can smooth out skin and also create a glowing effect, and simple blurring (in the adjustment brush). From Lighting Effects to Oil Painting to sophisticated new Blur filters, there are dozens of artistic filters in Photoshop. Here’s the new Oil Painting filter:

photoshop-oil-paint-filter

10. Designing Brochures, Business Cards, Posters, and Other Graphics

We can do more and more in Lightroom to combine text and photos, with the Print module’s Custom Package functionality, added in Lightroom 3, and  the Book Module, new in Lightroom 4. Both allow you to output your designs as JPEGs. However, they both still have many limitations in layout and text; just as quick examples, you can’t tilt photos, apply drop shadows or other styles to text, or add other graphic elements, such as lines and shapes. If you find yourself unable to achieve a layout you have in mind, it may be time to turn to Photoshop. (Yes, you can achieve even more with InDesign, but for those like me who don’t want to also purchase a professional design program, and who already are purchasing Photoshop for other reasons, I find it to be quite powerful.)

11. Video Editing Capabilities

A lot of photographers are now shooting video with their DSLR’s as well. While Lightroom 4 added basic video editing capabilities — the ability to trim off the ends of a video and do basic Development work — it is very limited. Photoshop has much more extensive video editing capabilities. You can combine multiple videos, edit as needed, apply adjustment layers and filters to all or parts of your videos, etc.  (You may also want to consider Adobe’s Premier Elements or Premiere Pro for even more video editing capabilities.)

These are the top reasons that come to mind for me to continue to invest in Photoshop. If you have Photoshop, what are yours? Leave a comment below.

UPDATES: While there is no guarantee that the Photoshop CC subscription price won’t go up after your one-year subscription is up, Adobe has been signalling that they plan to keep it relatively stable. (Scott Kelby has claimed that $9.99 is the price for life, but Adobe has not confirmed this.) For those who are not interested in the subscription model, you still have the option to purchase the last version, Photoshop CS6. The only feature among those listed above that you won’t have access to is the Camera Shake-Reduction Filter.

 

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Related Post: Adobe’s (2013) Black Friday Sale: Photoshop CC + Lightroom for $9.99/month!