

Watch the playlist or check out the list below! I’ll try my best to make each description helpful enough in order for you to get an idea of the content on the channel. There may be some overlap between the types of content that any given YouTuber produces. I’ve created a few categories for grouping these YouTube channels. I’ve learned a lot about editing photos, how to shoot events, how to light subjects and so much more. I’ve listed out some of my favorite YouTubers whose channels are all about photography, videography, life and everything in between.

I can’t believe how much I’ve learned about photography, all by watching a variety of YouTube videos from photo experts.

Watching videos is a digestible way for me to catch up on the new ideas for camera accessories, versatile travel cameras and great additional camera lenses.Ī good number of talented YouTubers are putting out incredible content for photographers at all skill levels. I really enjoy watching a few videos a day, as the experts on YouTube have access to all sorts of equipment, gear and software that I wouldn’t normally get on my own. My secret is that I brush up on these types of skills using YouTube. Masking in Lightroom used to be called something along the lines of range masks, which still exist in lightroom, but have now however been replaced by these newer and much more efficient AI masking features.Īnother photographer-slash-YouTuber has also discovered this new way of editing, and Ryan (aka Signature Edits) has also uploaded a super insightful video showing how these new Lightroom AI tools can increase your editing workflow and speeds by up to three times faster than before.As you can tell, I’ve been a photographer for many years, and I love sharing my tips, from how to clean a camera sensor to how to take better photos at night. Then, he moves over to the basic tab and begins on the global adjustments of the image as a whole including whites and blacks adjustment, overall clarity, vibrance, and finally vignette.

Morganti then proceeds to create a new mask editing only the sky, followed by the lighthouse as an additional object mask, adjusting the clarity, texture, tone, and color saturation of the subject only. Morganti starts the process of editing his image of a lighthouse by cropping and straightening his image first and then proceeds to intricately edit areas of the image that need attention by invertedly masking everything but the sky.
