Archive for the ‘Lightroom Presets’ Category
Warming preset
This is a set of 2 presets with a wonderful warming effect. The resulting warm look is further enhanced with a vignette.The preset works equally well with JPEGs and Raws.
As the name implies, it adjusts the white balance to add a wonderful warm tone to the image. It “tightens up” the dynamic range by applying a little fill light and recovery, boosts the saturation and then “sharpens” the overall image by using a combination of Clarity (mid-tone contrast enhancement) and sharpen sliders.
There are two presets in this pack. A “regular” version and a “lite” version which just adds a little less of the warming effect.
Check it out.
Managing Develop Presets
One of Lightroom’s great productivity features is the ability to save your post processing work as a preset, allowing you to use the same settings time and time again on different photos.
However, over time, as you collect more and more presets, your preset panel can grow to unmanageable proportions. Time to get organized by creating preset folders into which you can organize your own presets or import presets downloaded from the Internet. Read the rest of this entry »
Free Solarize Lightroom Preset
This is an unusual, but fun preset.
It creates an effect similar to leaking light into a canister of exposed film. Some areas of the exposure turn negative, some remain unaffected. However, unlike with film, this preset lets you further adjust the effect so you can get just the look you like. It opens up a new creative and fun way to process your images. Read the rest of this entry »
Zero preset
This is a very simple, but very useful preset. It sets all values back to their “0″ position, acting as a “Reset To Zero Button”.
It is extremely handy when you’ve been experimenting and have adjusted a whole bunch of sliders. Rather than re-visiting each slider to set them back, you can use this preset. Note that this is not necessarily the same as using the Reset function in the Develop module, simply because the default settings of some sliders are not zero.
Download it and add to your arsenal of presets.
Tonemapping with Lightroom
Here is a fun preset that mimics the look of heavily tonemapped HDR images. Lightroom, of course, cannot create High Dynamic Range (HDR) images in the true sense of the word, but with some effort great effects can be accomplished.
The Steel Preset
Steel is a set of 3 presets (Dark, Medium and Light). This preset is kind of special, as it uses a non-standard tonecurve. In tact, it’s a tone curve that you cannot create using Lightroom’s own user interface. Instead, this tonecurve was created by editing the preset file with an external editor and plotting the curve coordinates manually.











