Picture Packages

A useful Lightroom technique

When I make large prints on the HP DJ90 dye printer, it’s usually strictly a ‘one at a time’ sort of thing. The prints are 18″ x 24″ (‘Super A4’ is the uninformative European description), which is as large as my HP will go and, after an obligatory 24 hour ‘drying’ period to let the ink dyes set, they are dry mounted and framed.

However, with my new found determination to get some work published again, smaller prints were called for – 9″ x 12″- and these just happen to divide an 18″ x 24″ sheet into four equal parts.

Rather than cut up the paper first and then do four print runs, it proved just as easy to make one combined print job and do the cutting last.

First I went into the Library module of LR2 then clicked on Library->New Collection. I dragged the candidates into this new collection and oriented them all vertically (Photo->Rotate Left/Right). These candidates had been processed and cropped just so, so that no further adjustments would be required.

Into the Print module of LR2, where I clicked on Tempate Browser->Lightroom Templates->2×2 Cells. Lightroom comes with this template installed. Moving the mouse cursor to the base of the screen to disclose the filmstrip – which I have set to hiding mode so it is ordinarily invisible – I simply highlighted four contiguous images, which then appear on the print ‘canvas’.

The screen now looked like this:

Then it’s off to the races, printing in the usual way. It takes a lot less time to do than to explain and you have the benefit of applying the same print settings to all pictures on the ‘canvas’. Of course if you process the originals poorly, then you may end up with four clunkers, but I seem to have lucked out.

Note the personalized nameplate at the top left of the Lightroom pane in the last picture above. You can do this by going to Lightroom->Identity Plate Setup.

One thought on “Picture Packages

  1. 18″ x 24″ is a good size, one that I’ve not encountered before.

    I’ve never come across the designation ‘Super A4’ either, and it seems wildly inaccurate, A4 being 8.25″ x 11.75″.

    I worked for a U.S. company, which meant also keeping stocks of US quarto, which of course is the rather nicely balanced 8.5″ x 11″, as opposed to UK quarto which was 8″ x 10″!

    17″ x 22″ is available here in the UK, close to A2 size, which is 16 1/2″ x 23 3/8″. Again, falling short of 18″ x 24″.

    My favourite paper size in the days of regularly making prints in the wet darkroom was 9.5″ x 12″, so I can see the attraction of your chosen size.

    There’s a comprehensive overview of this minefield of US/UK/European paper sizes at http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/iso-paper.html – but maybe there are better things to do in life…

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