Ok, loved it however, a good video on the skin separation stuff would be great, so we could understand the high pass and low pass stuff. I tried it on a portrait of my wife and was met with a series of errors: 1: the command " filter gallery" is currently not available, 2: the command select is not currently available, 3: color range and it was just black, 4: warning: no pixels are selected. I am will ing to send you the raw file I started with for you to try. that all being said it still worked in the end I was able to use the retouch brush
Great tutorial! Next, I'd love to see how to even out color skin tones in different circumstances or perhaps I should say how yo blend colour skin tones for a smooth transition if that makes sense. :)
Thank you so much for this amazing video and for the action. Question: When I run the action I get a warning “The command “Filter Gallery” is not currently available”. I get this even after turning on the neural filter skin retouch. I am not sure what I am doing wrong.
Sometimes this has to do with what bit depth your images is in if you are editing an image with a 16 bit depth versus an eight pit sometimes the filter gallery won’t work, but I would just google it to make 100% sure.
You should've explained it in a step 1 and a step 2 sort of way until final step and boom wrinkles gone instead of talking about the science of how it works, that's what makes people attention span shoot somewhere else far from this video because the reality no one cares about the science about how you're doing it, they just need to see the actions get done in the most simplistic way possible, the best actions are the ones that all you have to do is press the button and its done, your video is very confusing and again should've been explained in a step 1 and a step 2 sort of way until final step and boom wrinkles gone and video done smh.
You’re completely entitled to your opinion. And it sounds like I’m not the right instructor for you. After 20 years of photoshop education and sales, and over a million YT video views, I choose to teach in a specific way that always explains the “why” behind the process. But thankfully for you, there are millions of instructors who teach the way you’re describing. I just happen not to be one of them.
I have been trying to use this and have been having issues removing a few objects. I'm going to try and refine my masks a bit more see if that helps. Also helpful tip is to do the removal before editing, because I have not been doing that.
I am used to working in photoshop for photo retouching but have not yet started to use the new AI features. As I start to use these new features should I stick with photoshop or should I start using lightroom?
Very good training video. You are so used to doing things with a brush you do that here, but it's not required to paint things, you just need to go around the edges or cover the entire object with the proper sized brush. I never used PS but am really impressed with this feature in LrC and have been using it a fair bit before I saw your clip here. I do a lot of bird photography & this new feature is great for removing branches & twigs.
As a sports photographer, removing crap from the background is important if possible. This new tool works OK, but it takes several minutes sometimes. Until the speed increases, I'm only going to use it on images. Someone is paying for a one-off. I would hate to be a wedding photographer trying to use it to remove a trash can or similar in a lot of images.
Soon we won't need models, locations, or even cameras to do our "photography." Is this progress? Soon, no artists will be needed at all. We will all be free to spend our time looking for underpasses under which to live. Some may call this a time saver, the modern way to do things. Get with it, old man, this is the future. Yes, it is the future. A future in which your skills will not be needed. Just think about it.
I have often wondered if LR and PS compete! Which is kind of strange, considering they are both Adobe Software. I doubt very much that Adobe would completely negate the need for Photoshop, wouldn't that be a bit like shooting themselves in the foot! There will still be features in Adobe Photoshop not as easily accessible or available in LR Classic. This new AI feature in LR will be a welcome addition.
I just "discovered" this feature while working on some photos. I saw this video, while watching another video. This will improve my editing techniques.
Thank you for this video. I absolutely agree with you. This will mean my use of Photoshop will be seldom now. Question: What kind of pad do you use with your pen to select things in Lightroom? I am tired of using my mouse to select objects to delete.
Thank you for sharing this information and instructions. I welcome the addition of anything to Lightroom Classic that makes it less necessary to open the images that I am editing in PhotoShop. Jan.
WOW!!! GREAT PRESENTATION KRISTINA!!! of really neat features that will enhance Lightroom! And your presentation was great!!! Thank you for sharing it!
Splendid video, Kristina! Lr is amazing now with "remove" and "lens blur". One question: in the "remove" tool, in the "mode" section, how does the "clone" tool work compared to the others? How do you choose an area to clone from? Alt+click doesn't seem to work. Thanks again for the clear instructions.
This may be the dumbest post I have ever seen!!! There is so much professionals do in Photoshop that will never be available in Lightroom. For instance, the the techniques I use to eliminate paper texture in scans of items like vintage postcards or halftone moiré patterns in scans of old newspapers magazines and such. This headline is clickbait at it's worst.
The small issue is the level of detail it leaves behind as per all Generative AI programs. you have to be careful - we use Hass X2D for Studio and Fuji GFX100II for our outdoor location work - (Ie 100Mpx - do it tiny bit by tiny bit - ie use very very small areas at a time otherwise you will have gaping holes in resolution - however the AI does not like to fix fixes so it is laborious and painstakingly slow - otherwise its quite a cool feature on lo res images
This is amazing! Can't believe this is in Lightroom Classic now! I just updated. And your tutorial is superb! You are great in explaining step by step & the ins and outs of this huge update. You saved me sooooo much time. Thank you! Oh, and I'm subscribing now!
We went to the Galapagos and had lunch our first day there at a wonderful little outdoor restaurant in April. Yesterday I started processing my iPhone photos in LR which I had not used in 10 years (long story, I am 71 with an 8 yo and a 10 yo, go figure). LR popped up and asked if I would you like to add the new AI feature. Well sure, why not. The picture of my kids at lunch was great but the straw from my daughters drink was right in front of her nose. Well lets give it a try, said I. On the third try I removed the straw from her beautiful nose. Then said I lets get rid of my beer. Not only did it remove the beer it revealed the candy behind the beer. I did not even know it was there. My mind was blown, and I am a programmer and a physicist. It is so easy to use. Today I found you and validation. Keep up the good work and make more videos. You are a natural teacher. Cordially, W. David McGuinn.
Obviously, you don't know Photoshop at all! Do you really think Adobe would release an App that replaces Photoshop? Generate fill is entirely low resolution and can only be enhanced to high res through layers. For example, Lightroom does not support layers, which is vital as an art tool.