[♪ music ♪] [First Things First: Learn How Lightroom for Desktop Works, with Ben Willmore] [Ben Willmore] Now let's get into Lightroom and just take a look at how the screen is laid out so you'll be more comfortable with what's there.
So here's Lightroom.
At the very top are a list of modules.
It's just the text you see in the upper right.
These are the various areas of Lightroom you can switch between.
When you click on each one of these modules, what you see on the screen below will change.
The Library module is where you view your images and you organize them.
So for instance on the left side of my screen, I see a list of folders.
And so if I know where my images are stored, I could click on a folder there to view what's on my drive.
Or below we have something called Collections which is where I could organize my images to put all the Waterfalls together or Slot Canyons or whatever it happens to be.
But the Library is where you view and you organize your pictures.
Then we can go to the Develop module.
That's where we actually adjust our images.
There on the right side of my screen I'm going to find a bunch of sliders where I can move them around to brighten, darken, or do other things to my images.
When I want to switch to a different picture, I can always go back to the Library module, pick a different image, and then head back to Develop to actually make changes to it.
That's where most of the action happens.
Now the other modules that are here, let's take a brief look at them.
The Map module can show you where your images were taken on a map where if you have that information attached to your images you can look at which images were taken in Europe versus the U.S.
The other modules that are there are for presenting your images or sharing them with other people.
But most of the action happens in the Library module where you organize things and in the Develop module where you change them.
Now let's look more generically at our screen.
You'll find that each edge of your screen features a little triangle.
That triangle will allow you to collapse or expand the panel that is stuck to that edge of your screen.
So there's one panel in each edge, and I can go to the little triangle on the edge of my screen to collapse and expand each one.
The one at the bottom is already collapsed.
You might think this little part here is a panel.
That's too small.
If I clicked on the triangle, here's the real panel that's down there.
So any panel you don't need you collapse down.
And most of the time, most of the action happens on the right side of your screen.
So it's only the panel that's on the right side you usually need to have open for the majority of your time when you're working in Lightroom.
The one exception to that is the Library module because in the Library module, both sides of your screen are kind of equally as important, so you'll probably have both panels open.
Now when you're in the Library, you might notice this area over to the right called Quick Develop, and you might assume that that's where you adjust your pictures, but that's not the primary place you do it.
That's under the Develop module where we were before.
So for now, you could just collapse down that Quick Develop area.
Then when you look at those side panels, you'll find that they're divided up into different sections.
Each section has a name and has a little triangle next to it.
We have that both here in the Develop module and if we head back to the Library module, you'll find that each one of those side panels divided up into different sections.
Well, you can click on the title of any one of those sections or the triangle that appears next to the title to collapse or expand each section.
So if there's a section that you don't know how to use yet, you might as well collapse it down so it doesn't clutter up your screen.
When you're in the Library module, you can just have your Folder list open because this is where you navigate your hard drive.
When you're on the right side in the Library module, if you don't know how to use this stuff yet, just collapse it down and only expand the stuff you know how to use.
You can even collapse the entire side panels and therefore really keep the screen much cleaner.
Also you're going to find a bunch of little icons that appear on some images.
For now you can ignore those icons until you learn what they do.
There's a bunch of features in Lightroom that are totally optional.
After you're done working on an image, if you want to share it with someone else, then you'll go to the File menu, and you'll find various choices here for exporting the image.
That's where it would create a copy that you could supply to somebody else.
So now you have a sense for how the screen is laid out and I hope that makes you more comfortable and confident as you learn the other features that are found in Lightroom.
