Even though I already know the most things about Lightroom and editing like that, I still love watching your tutorials. Your images are so beautiful and every single one of your videos is so inspiring and helpful🙏🏻✨
Learned so much from this tutorial. Currently faced with editing hundreds of images over the next day or so, some shot during Golden Hour. This short clip of yours will save me hours of frustration during the editing process. Thanks for posting.
When you use the sharpening tool, don't forget to use the mask! Hold option on a mac when you're dragging the top 3 sliders and that way you can adjust exactly what you're sharpening :)
I’m a recent subscriber and I’ve been hooked on all of your videos! Thanks for sharing your knowledge and techniques. I’m itching to shoot some portraits!!
Wow. I just saved a few of your videos to m favorites for reference in the future. yours are so easy to follow and seem to be simple enough for some not the best at editing. thank you!
Not correct at 2:30! The difference between saturation and vibrance is not about color temperatures : the difference is that saturation works equaly on ALL the colors while Vibrance only saturates the less saturated ones. Example : if you have a lot of saturated reds in your image, saturation is gonna saturate everything including reds while saturation is gonna saturate every colors except reds. That's why it appears like a more subtle tool !
Julia Trotti is a common mistake to think that Portuguese is Spanish, I just wanted to clarify! For you and for anyone that is reading (wasn't hate I swear)
Thank you, great video - I am always to scared to take back lit golden hour photos, but i will now give them a spin! Thank you, you videos are really helpfull
Thanks for the video Julia. I am learning a lot from you. I have a question, what photometry setting should I use for backlit portrait? Spot? Or multi? I am using fujifilm.
Hey! I always use my white balance on manual :) I normally keep at around 5200 and change it if the shot is looking off. This makes most processing a lot easier as each shot is exactly the same and I can sync my presets to it!
Yep, I do colour correction in Lightroom first then retouch in Photoshop. I pretty much retouch all of my portrait work in Photoshop afterwards, though I do try to keep the retouching minimal and natural :)
you can see at the top right corner it says ISO 800, 35mm, F/2.0, 1/2500th of a sec. just below the histogram. IMHO Sigma is better than Canon for 35mm.
I just use standard picture profile. If you shoot in raw, it doesn't matter too much as you can revert any picture profile you use back to 0 with an editing program like Lightroom or Camera Raw :)
This may sound really stupid, but I can't seem to work out how to see the before shot in my lightroom. What key do you use to see the before photo? (Just started out with lightroom...)