You Need This TOTALLY UNDERRATED Landscape Editing Trick
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- Äas pĆidĂĄn 5. 07. 2024
- đïž Check out my new Lightroom Landscapes editing course: www.matiash.com/lightroomland...
I am often reminded of the creative power that Photoshop's Tilt Shift blur can have to seriously improve the visual quality of landscape photos. I'll show you how to apply it effectively because it doesn't work on all photos.
Chapters:
00:00 - Tilt Shift Blur is underrated
00:59 - Reviewing the photo
01:30 - Editing the photo using Lightroom
07:51 - Prepping the image in Photoshop
08:21 - When youâd want to use Tilt Shift Blur
10:35 - How to add Tilt Shift Blur in Photoshop
#lightroomtutorial #photoshoptutorial #lightroomediting
Congratulations on explaining a complex subject in a clear straightforward way. Much appreciated.
My pleasure, Dale!
You're so right, Brian. We unconsciously tend to get hooked to a routine until we bump into someone who reminds us that there're other choices and options.
Tks for becoming that particular person!
Youâre most welcome! The idea for this video came to me yesterday while I was editing this very photo and realized that I had totally forgotten about the tilt shift blur đ
Thanks Brian. Never knew you could do this in PS. Did this by accident once with a Fuji camera and the Toy film sim in it. Donât ask me why I tried it but I was on a hill looking down on a small village and it looked good. Happy accident. But you saying this works best being above the subject makes sense.
Thanks very much, Brian! Honestly, this is the first time when I hear of the lens blur shift effect. The use of this tool indeed would make a perfect sense in certain compositions, meeting specific criteria. Thanks again for sharing!
Thank you for going through the entire edit and then into the tilt-shift. I learned several additonal things I'm going to try. Terrific video.
Great technique. Thanks for producing the video.
Very cool Brian. Thanks for all these types of videos. Looking fwd to trying this with my shot of Silveryon from above the town at the Minerâs shrine
Selecting the sky and then intersecting the selection with the sky bizarrely seems to produce the same more precise sky selection. Sky intersected with sky is only 2 steps and a little quicker than the method you show here, with similar results.
Neat! Thank you Brian.
My pleasure, Jim!
After applying tilt-shift distortion lines do not show up, just the pin selection, any suggestions to fix?
Off topic, but is there a way to change the overlay (for cropping) in Lightroom for the iPad? Thanks.
To my knowledge, the only option I see is the thirds overlay. But I agree that it'd be great to have the option to view other overlays.
Hi Brian. I noticed when you used the color picker for white balance, the loupe showed black rather than the white where you selected. Does that mean youâve got the same issue that many are complaining about and have been for some time now. I understand Adobe has acknowledged the problem but so far there is no fix. Have you got any information from Adobe on this?
Yup, this is a known bug that also affects the Point Color picker. Adobe has implemented a fix and we should see that in the next update.
@@brianmatiashGreat news Brian. Thanks
@@brianmatiash Hi again Brian. I just updated to Sonoma 14.5. Turns out the White Balnce color picker issue has been fixed for Lightroom Classic but a new and more serious issue has been introduced for Lightroom, at least for me; specifically the app crashes when I try to use the color picker for both White Balance and Point Color when I place the picker on the photo. I've reported it on the Adobe forum and also spent over an hour with an Adobe tech but no solution found. Have you updated to 14.5 and if so, do you have the same problem?