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Akvis sketch 2015
Akvis sketch 2015










akvis sketch 2015

AKVIS SKETCH then click the buttonħ) Done. That could be a JPG 8bit or something else.ĥ) Now- the 'tricky' part! Click back on the Drop-down menu at the end of the box, and select from the drop-down menu.Ħ) Type a NAME for the preset as you would like to see. here)Ĥ) Set up the options for the type of file that Akvis needs. (My clips illustrate adding Nik Silver Efex in Windows)ģ) You will see the App name appear UNDER the box : Application.

#Akvis sketch 2015 mac

(I am not familiar with Mac systems, but likely found in your "Applications" folder.) Highlight the App and click in the Finder window.

akvis sketch 2015

do not type 'Akvis' here.)Ģ) In the Finder/FileExplorer window that opens navigate to the App/exe program where it installed. Sorry for a long post, but I will see if I can put it in screen-clips:ġ) As in your screen-clip click on (ignore anything already in the box! ie. When you choose it, the Lightroom photo will be sent directly to that other Mac application. After you do that, you can select a photo in Lightroom, choose Photo > Edit In, and whatever application you added will be on that submenu for you to choose. If you have other photo applications on your Mac that you'd like to integrate, choose Lightroom > Preferences, and in the Additional External Editor section, create a new External Editor preset for any other Mac image application you have. Use whichever list has the app you want to send the image to.Īfter you've done it a few times, you'll realize that all you are really doing is adding an image to a Lightroom collection on the Mac, picking it up in Lightroom on the iPad, and sharing it straight to another iPad app. In the share sheet, instead of tapping Share, you can also try tapping Open In or Edit In, because they present different lists of iPad apps. In the standard iOS share sheet, tap the other iOS app you want to use for the sketch conversion.

akvis sketch 2015

  • Go to the image and tap the standard iOS "share" icon at the top of the screen.
  • In there, you should see the image that synced up from Lightroom on your Mac.
  • Switch to your iPad and open the Lightroom CC app.
  • Because the collection syncs, the image will be synced to Lightroom CC (cloud storage).
  • When you have a photo you want to convert into a sketch, add it to the collection.
  • Enable Lightroom CC syncing for that collection.
  • You can name it something like "To iPad for sketches".
  • In Lightroom on your Mac, create a collection.
  • If you're already using Lightroom Classic and an iPad, a great shortcut is to use a collection shared to Lightroom CC (mobile). It depends on whether you're talking about integrating conversion apps on the iPad, or on the Mac. I suspect it would be a simpler, faster route. I'm wondering if there are conversion apps that can can be integrated into Lightroom classic.












    Akvis sketch 2015