@@robertpage8094 He is missing nothing. I bought it and after 4 very frustrating hours, I sent it back for my money back. Everything you can do on this garbage thing you can already do on your keyboard. It is pure overpriced garbage.
I must admit that I wasn’t convinced at first Ted because one does have access to all the tools via the given software. But as you moved along, I understood how one can configure any software with his own user interface. This gives you a certain freedom you from the suggested default interface proposed by the software. It goes much beyond personalizing function keys. It liberates you from a way to work that you pre-established when using the software interface and gives you the possibility to question the limits you’ve imposed on yourself when working that way. Sure enough this hardware can simplified your workflow but its power comes with its Creativity potential. It gives you the ability to rethink how you are in control. Working within the boundaries of a software interface limits you to see all controls as independent and ultimately guides you towards pre-established ways of adding one control over another just like one follows a recipe. I do believe that you can get much more creative with this tool using newer blends of control that you never thought before. That said, I find it quite expensive and I agree that this is a luxury tool. But if everything goes well the price might go down. And yes, I believe that it’s time to toss aside our keyboards and mice. Great review Ted!
Just got mine. Mine had major QC issues. Two SAVE buttons instead of an Undo. Right function key popped off after a day and a half of use. Also the magenta lights behind the square keys are way too bright (put tape over them). You're not color correcting anything after looking down at it. I really really wanted to love it, but the basic QC issues are a bummer.
I take it all back! I tried the device today, and I am actually REALLY impressed. Its WAYYYY more useful than the Loupedeck+, feels great, and is highly customizable (and yes, its gonna take some time to customize) but it actually feels good in the hand, and now that dials are not dedicated to a singular program its actually seems like it could be hugely helpful. I just cant wait till Capture One has support. The price is really steep that my only complaint, what isn't in this field. And its really made for a power user. If you are casual user of any of the supported programs, its a be cost to eat. A power user knows shortcuts, but this device works so well.
For the people complaining about the price; if every action saves a fraction over using the keyboard and mouse, that could add up to a considerable amount of time over the course of a project, or a year.
@@magicalsnek haha what are you talking about. When I use this with LR I barely touch the mouse! 😂 I turn the knob for all the sliders. It's much easier. Is it essential.. Nope. But it's way better. Use it before slamming it.
Sorry Ted but this sounds just like an advert for an over-priced gimmick. I've watched many reviews of this device but never been convinced. I've customised my Wacom menus for all the apps I use and find that this does all I need so I'll not spend money on what I view as a gimmick!
I wanted to use my intuos side buttons but i never got to do that. Nor, i don't know anyone who does (probably cause of their placwment isn't near the keyboard. Will these buttons do macros? Or you can just assign them as Ctrl/ Alt etc..?
Yeah, I just watched Taran's review on ShortCircuit of this thing and he made several good points and demonstrations why this thing is really not worth the money. Also, they have now had time to fix many problems that plague it but they haven't. I'm here because I wanted to see which TH-camrs are shilling for it so I can add them to my "paid advertisers" list.
Ted, I love the product, I know its kinda pricey, but can help if you are serious about video editing. I have one observation though. When I see TH-camrs promoting the product, and then not use it in one of their future videos, proving to me that the product was just a promotion and not something one truly believes in, I feel that I can no longer trust the TH-camr. I would really like to know, if you feel if this is a long term product that you will use, or if this is a candy that you use now, and forget about it in a few days or weeks. Your comment would highly be appreciated so that we can take a good decision.
Wow, there are some negative people commenting here. I am a wedding photographer in Australia and the Loupedeck CT is costing me in excess of $800. If it saves half the time I believe it will, the Loupedeck will pay itself off in a few months! So excited to be able to save so much time on editing! :-)
The thing stopping me from buying this is the inked labels on the buttons. It would be MUCH more attractive if all the buttons were unlabeled, used the same generic LED-style as the round numbers, or had customizable displays. I have a hard time getting used to pressing the Undo button to, say, trigger a Keyboard Maestro macro in Audition, Premiere Pro, or Photoshop. The same thing with the other pre-labeled buttons.
Yeah for $200 this would be an awesome product, but at $600 no thanks, that's just got the creator tax on it and there's no way its actually worth that much
Don't be so cheap on yourself. You won't always be buying glass and if you stop to think how much money you waste in a lifetime on pizza, beer, weed, and junk, $600 is nothing.
got one, can't wait for it to come in. i actually just wanted a macro controller, found out about the stream deck. looked at it, decided it was too basic and found the "live" then this. im ready
The level of mastery of this brand new device is amazing and leaves me wondering how long you have been involved with ths item. That said, I'm a bit puzzled by all the negative comments. Certainly adjustments by turning physical wheels and knobs seems infinitely preferable to moving sliders with my mouse. The price may or may not be high depending on the build quality, and how relevant the device will be in the future through firmware updates. All in all, I found this an impressive and intriguing demonstration even if I'm not convinced that I need it. But this will remain on my radar and I will keep an open mind about it.
The negative comments amaze me too. Lol. People have never used it but crap all over the device. I'm a sports photographer and shoot anywhere from 1500-2000 images for a game and Loupedecks have been great for me. Sure, I agree that I wouldn't call this "essential" but it's a luxury if you can afford it. Twisting a knob is much easier and quicker that using a mouse IMO. How much easier is up to each individual. I know when I'm culling and rating Loupedeck is awesome. This looks like a super upgrade!
After thinking about it more, I don’t think I process enough pictures that the increase in speed matters much to me, but the idea of physical controls appeals to me for the same reason they appeal to me on cameras - they make me feel more directly attached to the process. I don’t like wading through menus and I think I would feel more connected to editing if I were using knobs and wheels instead of clicking and dragging a virtual slider. Now that I’m aware of the less sexy but cheaper previous version of this tool I am seriously contemplating getting that one.
@@gfriend2015 I'd rather throw 600$ in a garbage can and light it on fire lol. It would serve about the same purpose as this thing since I already have a keyboard and mouse
It looks similar to an Elgato stream deck with extra buttons and that scroll wheel. I'd absolutely love this! I'm assuming you can't plug it into the iPad Pro and use it?
It looks interesting, but pretty sure it would slow me down. The UI on our softwares are designed to work so well with keyboard and mouse/tablet. This just seems more difficult than it should be. Especially after building years of muscle memory on traditional input devices.
I have had it for over a week now and id say im about back to speed as prevously - but i also fiddle with things more and really push them to be just as i want them - where i would let it slide before i now make the adjustments perfect :)
I have a question can i use in different pcs keeping the same configuration? The macros can be create and save in a cloud? I have a razer tartarus and sabe my macros for use in another pc It possible do the same in loopdeck software?
I've always been a bit dubious of Loupedeck products but they're quite popular. I had been using the MIDI2LR plugin with a musician's MIDI controller (Behringer X-Touch Mini) and it's fine if you want customisability and such.
Sounds like it's pretty bound to Adobe. Does this mean you're over Capture One? Me, I'm still getting used to dealing with computers rather than with chemicals.
I want to see someone burning through some edits with this thing to be convinced. I can already edit very fast using combination of ALT, CTRL and SHIFT with my mouse and keyboard.
Hey Ted, I noticed on the Loupedeck website that they've only got "beta support" for Capture One Pro with the Loupedeck+, will they be planning any support in the future with the Loupedeck CT?
Could you do a video on your work flow processes and how you actually work. This sounds a great device but you’ve also said how great an I pad is work on. I think it would be hard to go back and forth from system to another
Mine does not do any of this stuff. I can't flip my dial controls the way you show. I can't drag them off to remove them. I can't drag a new one on to replace it. Once I start a new workspace and add something to a blank spot, it seems to be stuck forever. I can't reprogram my square buttons either. They just don't accept anything. It just doesn't work.
No more space on my desk - can't do anything without a keyboard; and a mouse with small wacom tablet take up the rest of the space. And being left handed with a tablet on the left I would find using this more than difficult. And towards the end here you say you can use loupedeck so it works like a mouse or can replace keyboard shortcuts - if you have those already, doesn't seem much point. I could see this being useful perhaps if you employ an un- / semi-skilled assistant in your photo work - quite a few of the "clerical tasks" managing a LR collection, sorting images etc might hive off to this. But it's not cheap.
For video Editing the Avid Transport was very useful and programmable. The software is no longer supported so the hardware which was wonderful is no a paper weight. I am very interested in this device, especially do do something as simple as scrubbing and cutting.
Hi, I really like the way you've set yours up! Anyway you can put up your Loupedeck profile or presets to be able to set mine up the same way? Thanks and have a great day.
I just got mine today and I love it right off the bat! It's much better than the Loupedeck + too me because it's so much easier that you can actually name the icon/square so the learning curve is much shorter! The previous one I had to remember what action was assigned to C1 or D1 knob for example. (similar to a keyboard shortcut) With this just drag the action it knob name over and your done. It's awesome.
$550?! And no Capture One Pro support. I’m all set. The Tourbox is good enough. But $550 is a bit too high class for my basic needs. If money was no option I’d buy this now, just for PS.
If it performs as well as described, I can see why it costs what it does, just hard to justify in my case - especially without full Capture One support. I could see maybe $300 in value to someone like me if built well, but I get that quality hardware with all these touch screens is not cheap to build.
Sean_B yes, sad but true. Bit strange though as they make great cinema cams at an unbelievable low price and practically give away Resolve but still can’t put that keyboard on offer for half its price, which may be tempting if it was only around 500 bucks.
Sean_B it stays permanently on, that might have a long term impact, having to plug in and unplug might cause some damage to the unit , an on/off switch would have been more practical. Plus a pouch for it would be good,
The first professional non-linear editing systems used to come with dedicated controllers. That was something I missed for a while, until mice began to come with scroll wheels and extra buttons, and now I can do the same operations with just a keyboard, a mouse, and a trackpad. The only controller that is worth it to own is the physical color wheels for color grading in Davinci Resolve.
I’ve been looking for something like this for a while. I have limited hand function- can I ask how easily the top 6 knobs turn? I’m trying to decide this or the new palette gear (now monogram).
beam me up scotty!, a great tool, esp. for people on the Autism spectrum; as it "analogue" converts those confusing tool interfaces into simple button and dials. one idea, how about this adds the tethering workflow too, so you can do camera control through it!, would make scanning film rolls with a Epson V850 or downloading your cards, through Nikons' Snap Bridge app, NX studio, or XT tethering software a breeze.
I have been looking for reasons to buy this device. But I don't think it will replace my tablet and razer orbweaver keypad set-up for Photoshop. And for Lightroom, my Loupedeck+ is so much superior than this. I have to pass on this although it looks so cool...
Great bit if kit BUT...only if you happen to use one of the supported software editing programs. If you don't (like me) it's next to useless. I use Powerdirector and you cannot colour grade or use the shuttle wheel on the Loupedeck CT. Basically I spent a lot of money on a very expensive desk ornament. Check the supported software before you get your money out. I wish I had.
Great Video. We can see here the potential.. If it can spare me time while working on the Computer i‘m very interested. I love my actual loupedeck+ and this one seems even more powerfull. Will it change the picture quality: no Will it simplify the part of the photography that i like the less: yes
the big issue is !!!! it doesn't works very well with iMac especially when your iMac wakes up from sleep, this devices cannot wakes up together, you need to unplug and replug again to get it works
Holy crap, Ted. A 20 minute video to tell me all the options for a device. I have enough to learn in just the menus and functions of any piece of software. I don't have the brain cells to then try and translate that to a totally unfamiliar input device. Not sure who is going to view this as less work or more efficient. Also, I much rather see exactly how you use it, not get a general overview of what the product can do.
This system currently is limited to supporting only the Adobe suite of products and little beyond. For other professionals who choose to have little to do with Adobe but prefer to align their support with other professional developers such as Phase One's Capture One, the Affinity suite and DXO etc as examples there is little or no support with this product and unlikely to be. Buyer be ware we say.
I'd like to give nice feedback, but have a hard time to come up with that. So, I can assign UI functions to Loupedeck CT (LDCT) controls, through the matching LDCT app. But I already have those functions in the creative application in the first place. And I'd have to spend some €600 including sales tax (wild guess) to get this all in HW/SW and next spend hours assigning original functions to the LDCT. Let's say this is a raspberry pie with touch control displays that we find in many devices - the round one in smart watches. Bundled into a very sophisticated package. Does not sound very expensive. Several issues. (1) User interface functions of, say, Lightroom Classic (LRC) are listed in the LDCT app. Imagine Adobe puts a new function in LRC, then how much time before LD integrate that into a new version of the LDCT app? (2) The demonstration of the UI function assignment in itself is not sexy but rather repulsive. I would like to see what happens when you use it. (2a) Edit a shot in LRC with the regular UI versus (same actions or rather result) with the LDCT. (2b) And then some work with layers in Photoshop with and without the LDCT. Long time ago, at an institution where I taught we had scanning and laser-printing photocopiers for us to produce lecture handout. The first brand had a very transparent UI that was designed from the user's process or task. You could punch a few things in mindlessly. Which can be handy, even for a university teacher. Then "purchasing" negotiated the replacement and we got another brand. Here, the technical designers had made sure every function had either a button or knob, or an entry in a menu. The logic was hard to appreciate. This goes back to application development in the 1970s, when engineers started with a database and wrote a program to create, read, update or delete a record in a table in the database. These programs had a screen associated with a code and a user's application was a bunch of programs with screen codes that they needed to work through. When user interface design took flight in the 1980s, some people started to wonder, why do we need a user guide? Adobe does not do a lot better than this and what I see from LDCT does not sell it to me. Show me this is intuitive because it can be set up in an intuitive way that has been well thought through (and for me to be able to change that is a separate story). Then, when I like it, I may think of spending those 600 currencies because I now have an idea that it makes my life so much easier that it is worth it.
Appreciate the video but it feels like I’d have to spend a lot of time with this thing before it will actually/ maybe save me time (and money).. don’t feel it would be worth the hefty price tag.
i have watched 6-7 EXPLANATIONS of loupedeck ct and yours is BY FAR THE BEST!! was on the fence about purchasing this but you made the sale!!
For $200 I would have totally picked it up.
Maybe even for $250.
But $550 is just crazy !!!
u do not now what you are miising
@@robertpage8094 He is missing nothing. I bought it and after 4 very frustrating hours, I sent it back for my money back. Everything you can do on this garbage thing you can already do on your keyboard. It is pure overpriced garbage.
YOu do not miss anything. I bought it and returned it after 4 very frustrating hours trying to make it work.
@Tucker Samuel wow, so you have a bot account to respond to your bot account. LOL
I paid $550 for the ct version
I must admit that I wasn’t convinced at first Ted because one does have access to all the tools via the given software. But as you moved along, I understood how one can configure any software with his own user interface. This gives you a certain freedom you from the suggested default interface proposed by the software. It goes much beyond personalizing function keys. It liberates you from a way to work that you pre-established when using the software interface and gives you the possibility to question the limits you’ve imposed on yourself when working that way.
Sure enough this hardware can simplified your workflow but its power comes with its Creativity potential. It gives you the ability to rethink how you are in control. Working within the boundaries of a software interface limits you to see all controls as independent and ultimately guides you towards pre-established ways of adding one control over another just like one follows a recipe. I do believe that you can get much more creative with this tool using newer blends of control that you never thought before.
That said, I find it quite expensive and I agree that this is a luxury tool. But if everything goes well the price might go down. And yes, I believe that it’s time to toss aside our keyboards and mice.
Great review Ted!
I wouldn’t call something like this essential, it’s a luxury not essential
£500 ?!?!? ...... I'll wait for the knockoff from Hong Kong!
Read my comment above, it's not even a luxury item, it's a hindrance to your work.
It's essential when you're a LoupeDeck affiliate haha
@@websitesthatneedanem did you find a knockoff? i'm really considering into buying some hardware to help me with my editing
Nope....
Excellent review/tutorial. Clear, concise and not a frame wasted on needless drivel. Very refreshing!
Just got mine. Mine had major QC issues. Two SAVE buttons instead of an Undo. Right function key popped off after a day and a half of use. Also the magenta lights behind the square keys are way too bright (put tape over them). You're not color correcting anything after looking down at it. I really really wanted to love it, but the basic QC issues are a bummer.
I take it all back! I tried the device today, and I am actually REALLY impressed. Its WAYYYY more useful than the Loupedeck+, feels great, and is highly customizable (and yes, its gonna take some time to customize) but it actually feels good in the hand, and now that dials are not dedicated to a singular program its actually seems like it could be hugely helpful. I just cant wait till Capture One has support. The price is really steep that my only complaint, what isn't in this field. And its really made for a power user. If you are casual user of any of the supported programs, its a be cost to eat. A power user knows shortcuts, but this device works so well.
Just ordered mine today for Adobe and also live streaming videos
I’m so excited. I’m getting one of these in the next few weeks! Color grading in video is going to be a whole new ball game now 😊
Nice clear review about a complex product/subject. The explanation and demonstration of custom workspace creation has me sold. Thanks
For the people complaining about the price; if every action saves a fraction over using the keyboard and mouse, that could add up to a considerable amount of time over the course of a project, or a year.
@@magicalsnek haha what are you talking about. When I use this with LR I barely touch the mouse! 😂 I turn the knob for all the sliders. It's much easier. Is it essential.. Nope. But it's way better. Use it before slamming it.
Sorry Ted but this sounds just like an advert for an over-priced gimmick. I've watched many reviews of this device but never been convinced. I've customised my Wacom menus for all the apps I use and find that this does all I need so I'll not spend money on what I view as a gimmick!
All this hardware that this youtube be promoting that is all it is promotion they getting pay or a free device
I wanted to use my intuos side buttons but i never got to do that. Nor, i don't know anyone who does (probably cause of their placwment isn't near the keyboard.
Will these buttons do macros? Or you can just assign them as Ctrl/ Alt etc..?
eladbari no macros, only key driven functions e.g. program shortcuts.
Yeah, I just watched Taran's review on ShortCircuit of this thing and he made several good points and demonstrations why this thing is really not worth the money. Also, they have now had time to fix many problems that plague it but they haven't.
I'm here because I wanted to see which TH-camrs are shilling for it so I can add them to my "paid advertisers" list.
Ted, I love the product, I know its kinda pricey, but can help if you are serious about video editing. I have one observation though. When I see TH-camrs promoting the product, and then not use it in one of their future videos, proving to me that the product was just a promotion and not something one truly believes in, I feel that I can no longer trust the TH-camr. I would really like to know, if you feel if this is a long term product that you will use, or if this is a candy that you use now, and forget about it in a few days or weeks. Your comment would highly be appreciated so that we can take a good decision.
It's quite nice hardware, software is buggy and laggy. The fact that he hasn't replied to you is quite telling, these are just paid ads.
Wow, there are some negative people commenting here. I am a wedding photographer in Australia and the Loupedeck CT is costing me in excess of $800. If it saves half the time I believe it will, the Loupedeck will pay itself off in a few months! So excited to be able to save so much time on editing! :-)
watching for second time, but this time I have one in my hands!! thanks!!
The thing stopping me from buying this is the inked labels on the buttons. It would be MUCH more attractive if all the buttons were unlabeled, used the same generic LED-style as the round numbers, or had customizable displays. I have a hard time getting used to pressing the Undo button to, say, trigger a Keyboard Maestro macro in Audition, Premiere Pro, or Photoshop. The same thing with the other pre-labeled buttons.
I thought it’ll be around 200$, but oh my! It’s way too over priced.
harsha A yeah 300 tops
Yeah for $200 this would be an awesome product, but at $600 no thanks, that's just got the creator tax on it and there's no way its actually worth that much
It sounds a bit confusing, I think I’ll stick to my keyboard and mouse 🐁
Stick with your keyboard. I bought it and returned it. It is just overpriced not work as advertised.
I appreciate the review Ted, I really do. At 5:50 I stopped looking -- I'd rather put my money into glass!
Don't be so cheap on yourself. You won't always be buying glass and if you stop to think how much money you waste in a lifetime on pizza, beer, weed, and junk, $600 is nothing.
great tutorial Ted, but a question, is this software limited to just Adobe products, or can it handle Phocus and Capture One as well?
got one, can't wait for it to come in. i actually just wanted a macro controller, found out about the stream deck. looked at it, decided it was too basic and found the "live" then this. im ready
what's the difference with loupedeck plus,can anybody tell me?
The level of mastery of this brand new device is amazing and leaves me wondering how long you have been involved with ths item. That said, I'm a bit puzzled by all the negative comments. Certainly adjustments by turning physical wheels and knobs seems infinitely preferable to moving sliders with my mouse. The price may or may not be high depending on the build quality, and how relevant the device will be in the future through firmware updates. All in all, I found this an impressive and intriguing demonstration even if I'm not convinced that I need it. But this will remain on my radar and I will keep an open mind about it.
The negative comments amaze me too. Lol. People have never used it but crap all over the device. I'm a sports photographer and shoot anywhere from 1500-2000 images for a game and Loupedecks have been great for me. Sure, I agree that I wouldn't call this "essential" but it's a luxury if you can afford it. Twisting a knob is much easier and quicker that using a mouse IMO. How much easier is up to each individual. I know when I'm culling and rating Loupedeck is awesome. This looks like a super upgrade!
After thinking about it more, I don’t think I process enough pictures that the increase in speed matters much to me, but the idea of physical controls appeals to me for the same reason they appeal to me on cameras - they make me feel more directly attached to the process. I don’t like wading through menus and I think I would feel more connected to editing if I were using knobs and wheels instead of clicking and dragging a virtual slider. Now that I’m aware of the less sexy but cheaper previous version of this tool I am seriously contemplating getting that one.
if you have time to spare, it is not essential and expensive, but for those who need to race with the clock, this is essential
i cant imagine spending almost 600$ on this
I rather buy a new lens
@@gfriend2015 I'd rather throw 600$ in a garbage can and light it on fire lol. It would serve about the same purpose as this thing since I already have a keyboard and mouse
then don't
@@Pnoysneakerhead24 don't worry. I won't
Great content! Masterful pacing in your videos!
It looks similar to an Elgato stream deck with extra buttons and that scroll wheel. I'd absolutely love this! I'm assuming you can't plug it into the iPad Pro and use it?
For $550? Yeah I'll stick to my autohotkey + custom keyboard setup
It looks interesting, but pretty sure it would slow me down. The UI on our softwares are designed to work so well with keyboard and mouse/tablet. This just seems more difficult than it should be. Especially after building years of muscle memory on traditional input devices.
I have had it for over a week now and id say im about back to speed as prevously - but i also fiddle with things more and really push them to be just as i want them - where i would let it slide before i now make the adjustments perfect :)
I have a question can i use in different pcs keeping the same configuration?
The macros can be create and save in a cloud?
I have a razer tartarus and sabe my macros for use in another pc
It possible do the same in loopdeck software?
I've always been a bit dubious of Loupedeck products but they're quite popular. I had been using the MIDI2LR plugin with a musician's MIDI controller (Behringer X-Touch Mini) and it's fine if you want customisability and such.
Can you customize it to work with Capture One?
I guess not?
You really do have nice eyes so I guess you convinced me to get this product.
Wow - really impressive! Kind of glad I didn't get the previous versions. This is on my wishlist
Don't waste your money. Don't buy unless you are a masochist that love to spend hours trying to do what it suppose to do out of the box.
Sounds like it's pretty bound to Adobe. Does this mean you're over Capture One? Me, I'm still getting used to dealing with computers rather than with chemicals.
Awesome and great review, greetings from Canada 🇨🇦
If this can connect to ipad pro it would be a must get
.....yesterday.....a good camera....good lenses.... a good enlarger....and that's all...
....today....lots of weird things....like this one....
I could get a good enlarger for this money, and I'm still planning to add 4x5 to my kit sometime.
I want to see someone burning through some edits with this thing to be convinced. I can already edit very fast using combination of ALT, CTRL and SHIFT with my mouse and keyboard.
... thx for the review, Ted! Is it possible to use both at the same time, the new loupedeck and the loupedeck+?
Awesome & Thanks :)
Hey Ted, I noticed on the Loupedeck website that they've only got "beta support" for Capture One Pro with the Loupedeck+, will they be planning any support in the future with the Loupedeck CT?
Will it be compatible with capture one? I know it is not yet. Need help an thanks
Does this work on ios to allow me to create custom maps in LumaFusion or GarageBand?
Could you do a video on your work flow processes and how you actually work. This sounds a great device but you’ve also said how great an I pad is work on. I think it would be hard to go back and forth from system to another
Happy Thanksgiving.....and the input devise is awesome
Mine does not do any of this stuff. I can't flip my dial controls the way you show. I can't drag them off to remove them. I can't drag a new one on to replace it. Once I start a new workspace and add something to a blank spot, it seems to be stuck forever. I can't reprogram my square buttons either. They just don't accept anything. It just doesn't work.
Is your software/firmware version up to date?
No more space on my desk - can't do anything without a keyboard; and a mouse with small wacom tablet take up the rest of the space. And being left handed with a tablet on the left I would find using this more than difficult. And towards the end here you say you can use loupedeck so it works like a mouse or can replace keyboard shortcuts - if you have those already, doesn't seem much point. I could see this being useful perhaps if you employ an un- / semi-skilled assistant in your photo work - quite a few of the "clerical tasks" managing a LR collection, sorting images etc might hive off to this. But it's not cheap.
what if i have a Wacom Intuos Pro, will the loupedeck shortcuts mess with the Wacom shortcuts?
For video Editing the Avid Transport was very useful and programmable. The software is no longer supported so the hardware which was wonderful is no a paper weight. I am very interested in this device, especially do do something as simple as scrubbing and cutting.
Hi pal, do you know how to install our own presets into the device for use?
does it, work on windows 10?
And soundboard too. right?
Hi, I really like the way you've set yours up! Anyway you can put up your Loupedeck profile or presets to be able to set mine up the same way? Thanks and have a great day.
Happy Thanksgiving Ted...
You too Dennis!
Does it work with C1?
I want to learn more . For reasonable price you get an inspirational and entertaining multitasking tool.
You convinced me Ted, taking delivery Saturday 30th. EXCITED 😀
I just got mine today and I love it right off the bat! It's much better than the Loupedeck + too me because it's so much easier that you can actually name the icon/square so the learning curve is much shorter! The previous one I had to remember what action was assigned to C1 or D1 knob for example. (similar to a keyboard shortcut) With this just drag the action it knob name over and your done. It's awesome.
Would this work on the ipad pro?
Interesting device! Thanks for the review. Shame it doesn't include a tablet/ pen as part of it unit.
Sadly no Capture One support :(
This device does work with Capture One
$550?! And no Capture One Pro support. I’m all set. The Tourbox is good enough. But $550 is a bit too high class for my basic needs. If money was no option I’d buy this now, just for PS.
If it performs as well as described, I can see why it costs what it does, just hard to justify in my case - especially without full Capture One support. I could see maybe $300 in value to someone like me if built well, but I get that quality hardware with all these touch screens is not cheap to build.
Does this work for Sony Vegas
Really hope they bring Capture One support to this soon.
Daniel Taylor check out palettegear
According to Loupedeck's website, you can use it with Capture One, but it is still on a beta versión.
loupedeck.com/en/software/capture-one-pro
Will this work with Corel painter?
Will this work with Capture One?
This is not even close to essential. I'd say completely pointless. Tablet is the only accessory beyond mouse + kb I'd recommend.
dose it work with lumetri on premier ,, since for ligthroom you can use a normal midi controler and a plugin ,
I saw another review that says it does. I was hoping it was compatible with Davinci Resolve but no joy there so far.
@@reginaldworthington7558 It will likely never be compatible with Resolve, as BMD makes their own overpriced editing keyboard.
Sean_B yes, sad but true. Bit strange though as they make great cinema cams at an unbelievable low price and practically give away Resolve but still can’t put that keyboard on offer for half its price, which may be tempting if it was only around 500 bucks.
why would Loupedeck NOT have an ON and OFF button on this
Why would you need one??
Sean_B it stays permanently on, that might have a long term impact, having to plug in and unplug might cause some damage to the unit , an on/off switch would have been more practical. Plus a pouch for it would be good,
Let’s be real. This isn’t replacing anyone’s wacom tablet.
The first professional non-linear editing systems used to come with dedicated controllers. That was something I missed for a while, until mice began to come with scroll wheels and extra buttons, and now I can do the same operations with just a keyboard, a mouse, and a trackpad. The only controller that is worth it to own is the physical color wheels for color grading in Davinci Resolve.
I’ve been looking for something like this for a while. I have limited hand function- can I ask how easily the top 6 knobs turn?
I’m trying to decide this or the new palette gear (now monogram).
beam me up scotty!, a great tool, esp. for people on the Autism spectrum; as it "analogue" converts those confusing tool interfaces into simple button and dials. one idea, how about this adds the tethering workflow too, so you can do camera control through it!, would make scanning film rolls with a Epson V850 or downloading your cards, through Nikons' Snap Bridge app, NX studio, or XT tethering software a breeze.
Bet its still slower than memorizing your short cuts
I have been looking for reasons to buy this device. But I don't think it will replace my tablet and razer orbweaver keypad set-up for Photoshop.
And for Lightroom, my Loupedeck+ is so much superior than this.
I have to pass on this although it looks so cool...
$549.00 - for advanced keyboard ? lol...
Its not even advanced, it has less keys than any keyboard but is more expansive.
can i make macros? can it detect other apps like OBS and games?
It will not work with outside programs. The list of available programs is on Loupedecks's website.
Could work well with a Wacom tablet. Program in the multi button keystrokes to one key.
Very Fancy but It's quite a hassle actually. A touchscreen is more intuitive.
yay
Do you know if this works with Lightroom on iPad Pro?
Great bit if kit BUT...only if you happen to use one of the supported software editing programs. If you don't (like me) it's next to useless. I use Powerdirector and you cannot colour grade or use the shuttle wheel on the Loupedeck CT. Basically I spent a lot of money on a very expensive desk ornament. Check the supported software before you get your money out. I wish I had.
Great Video. We can see here the potential..
If it can spare me time while working on the Computer i‘m very interested.
I love my actual loupedeck+ and this one seems even more powerfull.
Will it change the picture quality: no
Will it simplify the part of the photography that i like the less: yes
No thank you Loupedeck, I love my $30 logitech computer mouse.
Bought it -- thanks for the guidance -- will use it for LR/PS, but also FCP and LPX.
I want. I don't need. But I want. I have the money. but I don't need. I just want.
Very nice $200 control surface.
the big issue is !!!! it doesn't works very well with iMac especially when your iMac wakes up from sleep, this devices cannot wakes up together, you need to unplug and replug again to get it works
Loupedeck is nice but way too expensive, there is also Touch Portal, that runs on your tablet or smartphone, just try it out!
Capture One Pro 12?
Holy crap, Ted. A 20 minute video to tell me all the options for a device. I have enough to learn in just the menus and functions of any piece of software. I don't have the brain cells to then try and translate that to a totally unfamiliar input device. Not sure who is going to view this as less work or more efficient. Also, I much rather see exactly how you use it, not get a general overview of what the product can do.
Great video as always Ted!
I would pick this up for $200. Maybe the company will see all of these comments and actually drop the price.
So can you use it (as good) with non adobe software such as C1 or DaVinci Resolve?
This system currently is limited to supporting only the Adobe suite of products and little beyond. For other professionals who choose to have little to do with Adobe but prefer to align their support with other professional developers such as Phase One's Capture One, the Affinity suite and DXO etc as examples there is little or no support with this product and unlikely to be. Buyer be ware we say.
I'd like to give nice feedback, but have a hard time to come up with that. So, I can assign UI functions to Loupedeck CT (LDCT) controls, through the matching LDCT app. But I already have those functions in the creative application in the first place. And I'd have to spend some €600 including sales tax (wild guess) to get this all in HW/SW and next spend hours assigning original functions to the LDCT. Let's say this is a raspberry pie with touch control displays that we find in many devices - the round one in smart watches. Bundled into a very sophisticated package. Does not sound very expensive. Several issues. (1) User interface functions of, say, Lightroom Classic (LRC) are listed in the LDCT app. Imagine Adobe puts a new function in LRC, then how much time before LD integrate that into a new version of the LDCT app? (2) The demonstration of the UI function assignment in itself is not sexy but rather repulsive. I would like to see what happens when you use it. (2a) Edit a shot in LRC with the regular UI versus (same actions or rather result) with the LDCT. (2b) And then some work with layers in Photoshop with and without the LDCT.
Long time ago, at an institution where I taught we had scanning and laser-printing photocopiers for us to produce lecture handout. The first brand had a very transparent UI that was designed from the user's process or task. You could punch a few things in mindlessly. Which can be handy, even for a university teacher. Then "purchasing" negotiated the replacement and we got another brand. Here, the technical designers had made sure every function had either a button or knob, or an entry in a menu. The logic was hard to appreciate. This goes back to application development in the 1970s, when engineers started with a database and wrote a program to create, read, update or delete a record in a table in the database. These programs had a screen associated with a code and a user's application was a bunch of programs with screen codes that they needed to work through. When user interface design took flight in the 1980s, some people started to wonder, why do we need a user guide? Adobe does not do a lot better than this and what I see from LDCT does not sell it to me.
Show me this is intuitive because it can be set up in an intuitive way that has been well thought through (and for me to be able to change that is a separate story). Then, when I like it, I may think of spending those 600 currencies because I now have an idea that it makes my life so much easier that it is worth it.
All user functions are already built into the LDCT, you just have to decide which buttons and knobs you assign them to.
Cool...but the price...way not cool...rather use an X touch Mini for each application .
Appreciate the video but it feels like I’d have to spend a lot of time with this thing before it will actually/ maybe save me time (and money).. don’t feel it would be worth the hefty price tag.
Monogram CC is better because it's modular. And the orbiter is such a nifty controller. I haven't seen anything comparable from other manufacturers.
Rick Sanchez: This just sounds like a keyboard with extra steps.