![]() ![]() ![]() The biggest win against Lightroom that Exposure has is speed. You can also segregate those docks onto a separate screen, allowing all of your editing tools on one screen and your image on the other. The quadrants sit in docks on the left and right side of the screen which can be minimized for optimal viewing. They’ve set up four areas that Exposure calls “quadrants” that can be configured and customized. ![]() Work on two monitors? Head to the preferences and set up a completely customizable second workspace. Not a fan of where something is sitting? You can head into the settings and rearrange just about everything. The last advantage Exposure has in the interface is the customizability. In Exposure, everything is laid out right at my fingertips. I don’t need to go to my ‘Library’ to view my entire collection of images and I don’t need to navigate back to the ‘Develop’ module to work on my photos. Exposure’s entire system is built inside of one module. Second, are you tired of switching between Lightroom modules? Me too. For people like me who have trouble remembering what tool is buried where, Exposure has labeled just about everything - which makes finding things a breeze. Those of us coming from the Adobe suite will find an almost identical set of controls and tools. There’s a couple of great things that Exposure has done with it’s interface.
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