Fantastic Video for Photographers: Get Inspired From Stu Maschwitz’s Artistic/Lightroom Agility

Screen capture from the video, mid-crop

This is a fantastic video for photographers.
(Note: I couldn't get the original Adobe Connect version to work in Firefox; it worked for me in Safari. In any case, there's now a YouTube version for easy viewing, though the video quality doesn't seem as good as the Adobe Connect original.)

In the video, visual artist Stu Maschwitz sits down to a blacked-out Lightroom catalog loaded with a couple dozen photos submitted by strangers, and one by one he unveils and processes them as the whim strikes him, providing a running commentary about his artistic reasons for doing things, or technical comments about how to achieve in Lightroom whatever look he's going for.

There are some amazing transformations, but whether a particular result is or isn't your cup of tea is not the point. The point is to see that amazing transformations can be made so easily, and sometimes so subtly. The running commentary on the hows and whys provide ample little seeds that may germinate ideas when processing your own photos.

Foremost this video is about artistic interpretation. Secondly it's about Lightroom, because all the hows are shown in terms of Lightroom. But let me be clear, it's not an instructional video. It's not a how-to video, and it's not a demonstration of the right way to process photos. (The only time right way comes into photo processing is in journalism, where it's a synonym for nothing.)

It's just Stu looking at a stranger's photo and instantly deciding what that photo's story is to him, and then proceeding to crop and adjust the photo so that as far as he's concerned, it better tells that story.

I found it highly entertaining, and I came away both with new artistic techniques and new Lightroom techniques.

If you're a photographer, I highly recommend it whether you use Lightroom or not.

Update: Photo-Development Challenge!
Try your hand at developing a few of my raw images, and compare your results with others for yet more ideas and inspiration.
See here.


All 4 comments so far, oldest first...

Very cool. Many years back, I learned a lot about color grading for video from Stu’s tutorials (and I’ve used his Mojo plugin for Final Cut for several video projects), but it’s cool to see him apply the same grading sensibilities in Lightroom.

— comment by Benjamin Moore on February 13th, 2015 at 11:27pm JST (9 years, 2 months ago) comment permalink

Hi Jeffry. I’m very interested to watch, but I’m having some trouble with Adobe Connect. Any suggestions?

Try a different browser. It worked for me on OSX in Safari and Chrome. It uses Flash, so make sure that’s not disabled… —Jeffrey

— comment by Mike on February 14th, 2015 at 1:35am JST (9 years, 2 months ago) comment permalink

Thanks for recommending this screencast. An hour and a half well-spent, loads of inspiration!

— comment by Aaron on February 14th, 2015 at 7:08pm JST (9 years, 2 months ago) comment permalink

I had no problems to watch it in Firefox 35.0.1.

And really cool video. Normally I don’t like to edit my pictures too much, but the process Stu shows looks fun and definitely delivers.

Jeffrey, which picture worked upon struck you the most?

To me it was the Ohio waterfall, because of the use of gradients and the way the light turned out in the finished shot. The burning man, lol, because Stu tones it really heavily and makes it look natural in the end. The airplane, because shoot raw, :p And several others.

I can’t really pick just one… it’s the various processes (thought process and technical processes) more than the photos themselves that I found value in. —Jeffrey

— comment by nnkka on February 15th, 2015 at 11:01pm JST (9 years, 2 months ago) comment permalink
Leave a comment...


All comments are invisible to others until Jeffrey approves them.

Please mention what part of the world you're writing from, if you don't mind. It's always interesting to see where people are visiting from.

IMPORTANT:I'm mostly retired, so I don't check comments often anymore, sorry.


You can use basic HTML; be sure to close tags properly.

Subscribe without commenting