![]() ![]() Texture overlay lets you can blend two images together. You can adjust the location and size of the sun as well as the number, length and tone of the rays. The sun rays filter allows you to add artificial sun rays to your image for a very dramatic effect. Add more dimension to your photos to make them stand out!Īnd for those of you who like to delve into digital art: Adjust and accentuate different aspects that affect the overall contrast of your photo. With this simple yet powerful filter, you can create a more detailed and dramatic image. This is a great filter to use for portraits and even landscapes to create soft, saturated results. The Image Radiance filter gives an overall “dreamy” look by adding a glow to the lighter areas of the image. Quickly emulate the magic that happens just after sunrise or just before sunset. Simply dial in the amount of warm toning using the Amount slider and use the Saturation slider to introduce an even more overall color vibrancy. Use the Golden Hour filter to bring warmth, softness, and golden glow to all of your photos. This filter automatically analyzes your image and instantly corrects it using over a dozen controls at once, yielding naturally beautiful results with one simple slider! Accent can substitute for many traditional controls like shadows, highlights, contrast, tone, saturation, exposure, details and others. Here’s a look inside some of my favourite filters in Luminar: Here is a video demonstration where you can see how I processed one of my photos from my recent trip to Scotland. Third: Layers and Masks!!!! More on that below, but this is huge. Some of the filters are very similar to ones I used to use in Nik Color Efex like “pro contrast” and “darken/lighten center”. There are all kinds of presets and filters to work with. Photos come in and out of Lightroom like a breeze – an absolute must in my book. I tried a number of different software packages, and Luminar 2018 SuperNova came out on top. If you’re interested in HDR, check out my full review and video demo of Aurora HDR 2018. After trying a variety of software packages, I have 2 new favourites made by the same company: Luminar and Aurora (for HDR) both made by MacPhun. So I decided to spend some time searching for new alternatives for post-processing. Then, for HDR, I’ve been using Photomatix, which is just feeling old and boring. Besides, you’re about to find out why Luminar goes way beyond the current version of Nik. While the software has now been bought by another company, we don’t know if or when a new version might come out. And in fact, it broke in the latest update of Photoshop CC. Then this year Google announced they wouldn’t be supporting it anymore either. I used to love Nik Color Efex Pro, but the writing was on the wall in 2016 when Google made it free, simultaneously announcing they wouldn’t be developing it anymore, and fired the team that was working on it. Support for my favourite plugins is ending as they roll them into Studio. I’ve been in contact with their support team, but they still haven’t fixed it and Studio has been out for months. The problem is that Topaz Labs is rolling those plugins into their new Topaz Studio, which doesn’t play nice with Lightroom. I absolutely love Topaz plugins and I’m still using them. If you’re not interested, just skip down to find out more about Luminar.įirst there’s Topaz. Here’s a little background on what’s wrong with the software I was using. It’s this third step of the process where I felt problems were lurking. Step 3: Adding filter effects using other software such as one or more of the Topaz plugins or Nik Color Efex Pro. Step 2: More complex processing using Photoshop Elements – this is where I’ll do more complicated cloning and healing, blending exposures, and anything that requires making selections (and until now anything that required the use of layers and masks – more coming up on that later) Step 1: RAW processing using Lightroom – sometimes this is all it takes My workflow consists of 1, 2 or 3 steps, depending on what I want to do with the image: I guess as soon as I can call it a routine I should be changing it up a bit! But the software I was using had some problems. ![]() A few months ago I started to feel like my post-processing routine was getting a bit stale. ![]()
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