![]() ![]() ![]() Lightroom is only capable of doing some of those things and in the case of facial and skin retouching, there are much better and faster ways of doing it. Combining two images together (for group photos as an example).Special effects like toning, converting to B&W, adding a mysterious or soft glow, sky replacement and enhancement, etc.Removal of distracting objects in the background or on the edge of the image.That’s when I do things like the following: Once my model has chosen the images they want, then I move into the final editing stage where I work on each image on an individual basis. Step #2 – Final edits in Luminar AI and Photoshop To learn how to choose the best images faster and how to prepare your images to the preview quality level (ready to show your subjects or models) CLICK HERE or on the image below. Preview level quality Final fully edited image Exposure or brightness level corrections or tweaks.Color corrections like white balance and saturation level.What I consider basic editing includes the following adjustments made globally (to the entire image): I also do my culling and basic editing inside Lightroom. Lightroom is my base catalog and I import all my images into it so I can sort, tag, flag, rename, and so on. So the photo editing workflow I outline in the video below is exactly how I process my own images to the final stage. If you’ve been following me for a while, you’ll know that I only ever recommend and teach what I use myself. Why I use both Lightroom and Luminar AI in my workflow You’ll learn how to use Luminar AI as a plugin (two methods) and see what it can do to enhance and perfect your images. You’ll see why I recommend using both and how to use them together. In this article and video tutorial, you’ll learn how to edit images using both Lightroom and Luminar AI. ![]()
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