Little Known Lightroom Tool Saves HOURS: Auto Exposure In 1 Click

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  • čas přidán 22. 07. 2024
  • This Lightroom Tool saves me hours. Learn how to use adjusted exposure to speed up your batch edits.
    Adjusted exposure in Lightroom Classic lets you apply auto exposure to all of your images with one click. This little lightroom trick can save you a ton of time when you're batch editing hundreds of images from a session. Simply select your images and let Lightroom apply auto exposure instead of manually adjusting each one from scratch.
    While Lightroom auto exposure works a LOT of the time, it's not perfect and is really most effective when applied to very similar photos vs an entire session. Still, it's one more tool that can save you time while editing and help you with your photography editing inside Lightroom Classic.
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Komentáře • 82

  • @SignatureEdits
    @SignatureEdits  Před 8 měsíci +2

    Want faster edits? Check out the AI PRESET TOOLKIT! shop.signatureedits.com/?coupon=AI-CURVES-3487YT34

  • @JerodBeeson
    @JerodBeeson Před 8 měsíci +20

    People claim to teach something "nobody knows about" or "secret setting" all over CZcams...I have truly never seen or heard of this trick in nearly a decade using the program. Thank you!🎉

    • @SignatureEdits
      @SignatureEdits  Před 8 měsíci +3

      100% agree! I stumbled across it myself today and was like "huh - can't believe I've never seen this before" haha. Glad to hear it wasn't just me!

  • @JochenStrobel
    @JochenStrobel Před 8 měsíci +19

    Quick Develop is underrated, you can also apply presets (one after another), but the big thing for me is that you can batch editing proportional to the existing values. For exemple you can adjust white balance or exposure to multiple photos and they all change in relation to the existing values, whereas in the development section the absolute value is synchronised between multiple images when batch processing or copying adjustments.

    • @kkc552
      @kkc552 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Wow!! Game Changer Tip!!!

    • @kkc552
      @kkc552 Před 8 měsíci +3

      The only downside is that there is no hotkey for increasing or decreasing exposure/WB etc. when you are in Quick Develop. You have to use the mouse and do the clicking instead of typing.

    • @SignatureEdits
      @SignatureEdits  Před 8 měsíci +2

      Great points Jochen! I totally agree. Wish I'd thought to mention this inside the video!!

    • @SignatureEdits
      @SignatureEdits  Před 8 měsíci +3

      True! This would be so much better, if you could have exposure hotkey as +/- and then WB hotkey as {} or something directly under on the keyboard. It would make quick develop MUCH better

  • @training7574
    @training7574 Před 2 měsíci

    Very useful for a lazy amateur like me, thanks! I don't aim for perfection, good enough is enough!

  • @ehtishamhaider2624
    @ehtishamhaider2624 Před měsícem

    Really it save my time alot❤❤❤

  • @niallfeatherstone
    @niallfeatherstone Před 6 měsíci

    Another tog told me about this tip a while back but using the complicated shortcut and I forgot it, thanks for the video as this shown me another way to get to it, going to map it too my loupedeck now

  • @masonresnick5105
    @masonresnick5105 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Nice! I've generally stayed away from grid view & Quick Develop, but now I'm going to add this to my workflow.

    • @SignatureEdits
      @SignatureEdits  Před 7 měsíci

      Awesome! Glad it gave you something new to try Mason. Thanks for watching!

  • @liverpoolpictorial
    @liverpoolpictorial Před 8 měsíci +1

    This one tip is worth using Lightroom alone! You can do something similar (not the process, the end result) in ACR, but your tip is far more simpler and faster. Thank you so much.

    • @SignatureEdits
      @SignatureEdits  Před 8 měsíci +1

      So glad to hear it! Interesting to hear the LR version is easier than ACR!

  • @user-cv2sf7ll4j
    @user-cv2sf7ll4j Před 8 měsíci

    Thank you for helping me improve in my photography journey.

    • @SignatureEdits
      @SignatureEdits  Před 8 měsíci

      Happy to help! Hope it makes a difference for you :)

  • @Coatsey007
    @Coatsey007 Před 8 měsíci +7

    Really appreciate the video, excellent. The only thing I will add is I'm not really sure and what you're doing with the photo selection and then the highlight the one that you want it to match. This is quite a tricky thing, because obviously when you click on one or the others, then unselected, so there's something that you're doing there that wasn't clear in the video. I think it would be really helpful for your fans and viewers too slow that part down and explain it. I hope this is taken warmly and constructively.

    • @lorihannah5285
      @lorihannah5285 Před 8 měsíci

      I noticed that too!

    • @Coatsey007
      @Coatsey007 Před 8 měsíci +3

      @@lorihannah5285 I figure out that when you choose the photos, one can be highlighted by clicking on it once you have it selected as one of the many. I hope that makes sense. If you click on a photo that is not in the highlighted, then all the other photos become unhighlighted so it has to be a photo within the group that you've already selected. That way the rest are not unselected

    • @SignatureEdits
      @SignatureEdits  Před 8 měsíci +1

      So glad you got it figured Coatsey! Apologies for not being more specific on this step - To tell you the truth, sometimes this method works for me and sometimes it doesn't, which is why I didn't specifically teach it in the video... Still, I should have mentioned it! Thanks for watching and sharing this tip

    • @DigitalImageStudio
      @DigitalImageStudio Před 8 měsíci

      On your film strip you can of course select images using first and last image in a series whilst holding shift and also use the Ctrl key to select/deselect discrete images in the strip. To highlight the focus or source image for copying settings etc. without holding any other key just click on the thumbnail image, not the frame otherwise the selection will be lost.

  • @bryan67thomas
    @bryan67thomas Před 7 měsíci

    I never realized you could do those sort of batch edits

  • @martinstaffa8555
    @martinstaffa8555 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Wow! Thank you so much!

  • @anasmhimd4902
    @anasmhimd4902 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Amazing trick bro!!! 😍😍😍

  • @etuoyo
    @etuoyo Před 8 měsíci

    Wow I have always wished Lightroom would add this function. Had no idea it already did. Thanks

  • @eriktorres6953
    @eriktorres6953 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Thank you

  • @veselinvasilev9362
    @veselinvasilev9362 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Thank you!

    • @SignatureEdits
      @SignatureEdits  Před 8 měsíci

      You're welcome! Thanks for the watch + comment :)

  • @sutv6754
    @sutv6754 Před 8 měsíci

    Hello, I was looking and liking the LR course you offer but it does not say anywhere how much content there is. Like is it 2 hour course or 5 hours of videos or what?

  • @vascofmdc
    @vascofmdc Před 8 měsíci +1

    where's the "what? nooo way" guy when you need him... thank you. I learned something new today.

  • @stelioskritikakis
    @stelioskritikakis Před 6 měsíci

    I'd wish adobe camera raw had this feature too

  • @PackShotVideoPro-kl3fh
    @PackShotVideoPro-kl3fh Před měsícem

    Nice)))

  • @josediazh3890
    @josediazh3890 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Muchas gracoas.

  • @paulm8157
    @paulm8157 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Clever tips, prudently tempered caviates - nice. Does effectiveness depend on having images the same format, like RAW?
    BTW, effective use of zooming pic in pic - not seen that often.

    • @SignatureEdits
      @SignatureEdits  Před 8 měsíci +1

      Thanks Paul! I don't think file format is what determines effectiveness... It's got to be something to do with the way LR is reading the images. I noticed sometimes it does a great job, but when images are too different it sometimes does the opposite of what you'd want... Making photos even more dark when they should be brighter etc.
      My assumption is that LR is trying to adjust the overall pixel average brightness in the photo to medium grey. So a dark, underexposed photo with a blown out sky might in LRs eyes still be too bright and thus it gets even darker... I have no idea though!

  • @daygeckoarthawaii1360
    @daygeckoarthawaii1360 Před 6 měsíci

    Match Total Exposure isn't auto exposure. It only looks at the settings and adjusts the photos to match your target. For example if all settings are the same and ISO is 100 on the target, and 200 on the others, it will just make the others darker. If there are different light levels it won't adjust for that

  • @shortie8512
    @shortie8512 Před 8 měsíci +6

    I think it might have been worth explaining to people exactly how this feature works and why it does and doesn't work in certain situations. This tool does not analyse the histogram or do anything fancy with AI - I would love Adobe to bring something like this to LR as CaptureOne has something like this.
    LR looks at the exposure settings of the target image i.e. shutter speed, aperture, ISO plus the exposure adjustment in LR, and then adjusts the exposure value in LR for images being matched to the target on basis of the shutter speed, aperture and ISO on a per image basis i.e. if there's +1 stop in difference to the target for an image then LR sets the exposure adjustment value to -1 e.g. if the target was shot at 1/125, f4, ISO200 and no exposure adjustment in LR, then for an image shot at 1/125, f4, ISO100 (i.e. 1 stop under exposed in comparison) then the exposure setting would be set to +1.0 for the image.

    • @timk8258
      @timk8258 Před 8 měsíci

      Yeah, he obviously doesn't even really understand what Match Total Exposure is doing or what it's for. Basically if you shoot in Aperture Priority and you want to make all of the shots in a specific lighting scenario match after the fact (as though you had shot them in manual mode with fixed settings) that's what it does. But if the light is changing or if you're changing your shooting angle (such as the getting ready shots by the window where some are totally backlit / silhouettes and some are showing the direct window light on people's faces, you wouldn't be shooting every shot with the same manual settings anyway and thus this tool is not going to help you.

    • @SignatureEdits
      @SignatureEdits  Před 8 měsíci +2

      Awesome explanation! I find adobe in general is VERY sparse on their explanations of how things work 😂 I definitely don't know it all, just sharing things as I find them out myself!
      Thanks for the watch + insights!

    • @SignatureEdits
      @SignatureEdits  Před 8 měsíci +1

      This is so interesting! Appreciate you taking the time to explain it more deeply. You're right, I didn't know exactly what it was doing or how. That said, I don't quite understand how someone in Aperture Priority using this to correct would be any different than someone shooting in manual and adjusting shutter manually between images using this to correct... In general, wouldn't you get the same exact results, given that most people in manual will leave their aperture setting unchanged most of the time, and just adjust shutter speed (assuming you don't need to adjust it that for low light, more in focus etc etc)
      If you're not changing scenes / lighting between images, why would aperture priority even be changing your settings anyways? (Or are you assuming same scene, different skin tones etc.. in which case, then I get where you're going!)

    • @timk8258
      @timk8258 Před 8 měsíci

      @@SignatureEdits Aperture priority will often change the exposure slightly from shot to shot even as your composition changes because of the way it averages the tones in a scene and tries to balance it all out to 50% gray (obviously it's more complex that that with face priority metering, etc but that's the basic concept of what it's doing). So even if the light doesn't change your exposure will vary based on getting more or less of the background in the frame, or as you mentioned people with different skin tones or wearing darker or lighter clothing. So if you know that the light was the same and you were shooting from basically the same angle, thus the exposure should be identical for each shot, you can use Match Total Exposure to fix that easily.

    • @SignatureEdits
      @SignatureEdits  Před 8 měsíci

      Fair enough! Good explanation :) @@timk8258

  • @boruchlen
    @boruchlen Před 8 měsíci

    Very cool! Is there a setting like this in camera raw?

    • @SignatureEdits
      @SignatureEdits  Před 8 měsíci

      Greay question! I'm not sure - If you find it let me know!!

  • @royceahr
    @royceahr Před 8 měsíci

    After trying this on several sets of photos I am not pleased with the results. Like you said it works on some but not all which means on those that it does not work on you have to go back and fix them or hit reset which just adds to the workload. In my case I even had an error message pop up saying the it could not complete the task for some unknown reason. Then I had an instance where I selected 20 photos found one for a reference and then got an error saying that the process could not do them all but the ones that it did work on were really really dark...another failure taking more time to fix them or reset. In my opinion using user presets in quick develop works very well and in fact found that using Auto tone does what you describe after analyzing each photo.

    • @SignatureEdits
      @SignatureEdits  Před 8 měsíci

      100%! This is one feature I think has sooooo much potential if adobe would just update to work better. Atm Im finding certain uses it is VERY helpful (scenes that are static it works great) But using auto tone then applying presets sounds like a great idea

  • @truthsayers8725
    @truthsayers8725 Před 8 měsíci

    ive got LrC (version 13) and i dont have 'Develop Settings' under any of the pull down tabs. it looks like in your example, it should be just below Set Keyword and Add Keywords. this version does not have those options either. under Set Flag, Set Rating, Set Color Label, Auto Advance (as shown in your pull down) i have Set Flag, Set Rating, Set Color Label and then a new 'group' that has Set Metadata to File, Read Metadata from File and then a 'grayed out' Update DNG Preview and Metadata.
    this looks like it would be a nice feature to have but for some reason its not in my version

    • @SignatureEdits
      @SignatureEdits  Před 8 měsíci

      I bet you're on a PC! I didn't realize until hearing comments like this that on PC the develop tab is in a different place in the menu! Once you have all of your photos selected, select “Settings” from the top bar in Lightroom, then select “Match Total Exposure” from that drop-down menu.
      Give that a try :)

  • @emperor.augustus
    @emperor.augustus Před 8 měsíci +1

    Hi . And how do you select the photo you wanna use as the one with the correct exposure if you have already selected the photos you want to exposure correct? How do you highlight it? Thanks a lot.

    • @SignatureEdits
      @SignatureEdits  Před 8 měsíci +4

      Good question! Lightroom is super weird on this and I couldn't even figure out why sometimes when you select images it lets you click one and highlight it, and other times it deselects everything.... So in my case, I've found it works best when you select all the images and then click on the target photo without much delay. The longer you wait, the more often it feels like LR decides you're making a new selection and not selecting the target photo. But tbh I couldn't tell you... if you find out what's happening let me know!

    • @emperor.augustus
      @emperor.augustus Před 8 měsíci

      thank you very much bro@@SignatureEdits

  • @peteesposito6633
    @peteesposito6633 Před 8 měsíci

    I am using the latest lr classic on a pc and do not have this in my lr.

    • @SignatureEdits
      @SignatureEdits  Před 8 měsíci

      Weird! I just googled - Looks like it's in a different menu location on PC (Adobe, why you gotta be that way?)
      Once you have all of your photos selected, select “Settings” from the top bar in Lightroom, then select “Match Total Exposure” from that drop-down menu.
      Lmk if this works!

    • @peteesposito6633
      @peteesposito6633 Před 8 měsíci

      @@SignatureEdits thank you. I speciation your looking into this

  • @ytuberization
    @ytuberization Před 8 měsíci

    How does this compare to Radiant Photo?

    • @SignatureEdits
      @SignatureEdits  Před 8 měsíci

      I don't think they're really very similar. I've never used Radiant so I can't tell you for sure, but the AI editors actually adjust EVERYTHING in your photo for you... Whereas this is just adjusting the exposure, and even that job it doesn't do as consistently as it should...
      So for AI auto editing, I'd use one of the dedicated programs!

  • @viezure10
    @viezure10 Před 8 měsíci

    I'm a bit confused. Why do this, if afterwards i'll apply a preset that also modifies the exposure and other tonal settings? Or is this useful when the presets doesn't cover such things?

    • @jensgaethje8555
      @jensgaethje8555 Před 8 měsíci

      it only adjusts the exposure setting. It mathces the overall average exposure value of all pixels in the photo combined to the selected one. It only makes sense to use when your exposure is all oevr the place for some reason. It can also easily screw things up, when you have varying brightness values in your subjects for example, you'll see the background brightness varying as it tries to level the complete photographs....

    • @JochenStrobel
      @JochenStrobel Před 8 měsíci +1

      I would avoid any preset that changes exposure settings, if it is in the preset I would remove it and keep the rest of the preset.

    • @ziasportsphotos1.0
      @ziasportsphotos1.0 Před 8 měsíci

      Now that’s a helpful tip! I’ve tried matching exposure with subpar results, probably because I didn’t know about selecting a specific photo to base the exposure on. I’ll have to see if the feature yields better results with your advice. Thank you!

    • @SignatureEdits
      @SignatureEdits  Před 8 měsíci

      100%

    • @SignatureEdits
      @SignatureEdits  Před 8 měsíci

      Give it a shot! As I said, I get mixed results. It's most handy for shoots / parts of your shoot that have very similar framing / context. Let me know how it goes :)

  • @DROCKIMAGING
    @DROCKIMAGING Před 8 měsíci +2

    Great tip, but I want to know how you quickly selected so many photos so quickly without clicking each photo!

    • @SignatureEdits
      @SignatureEdits  Před 8 měsíci

      oh, shoot, I should’ve mentioned! Select the top photo you want to select, then hold shift on your keyboard and click the bottom photo you want to select. It will select everything in between :)

  • @torowazup1
    @torowazup1 Před 8 měsíci +1

    👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👌🏼😎

  • @videoart-studio7193
    @videoart-studio7193 Před 2 měsíci

    The method he discusses in the video doesn’t solve the problem for photographers using flash

  • @billmeador215
    @billmeador215 Před 8 měsíci

    Almost got it, but have issues...............1) According to Adobe you have to be the Develop Module for this to work............but you seem to be in the Library Module. 2) I can't see a way to pick one photo from the middle of a group of selected to be the source photo.............seems you have to make that the first one selected, then pick all the rest. 3) Bottom line, potentially great information, but explanation on how the selections are made would be extremely helpful for those of us new to Lightroom Classic.

    • @SignatureEdits
      @SignatureEdits  Před 8 měsíci

      Hey Bill! I totally agree, I messed up by not being more specific! I bet you're on a PC by the sounds of it - I didn't realize until hearing comments like this that on PC the match total exposure is in a different place in the menu! Once you have all of your photos selected, select “Settings” from the top bar in Lightroom, then select “Match Total Exposure” from that drop-down menu.
      Give that a try :)

    • @billmeador215
      @billmeador215 Před 8 měsíci

      Well, that is off too..............there is no "Setting" menu choice on the PC LRC menu bar......you have to choose Photo>Develop Settings>Match Total Exposure. And, you cannot select a range of photos using Shift and then pick one in the middle of the grouping to be the source photo.....you have to choose the source photo first, then use Shift Click if all the rest of the photos to change are adjacent to the first one selected, or Cntrl Click for photos on either side of it to get it to work properly. Anyway, found the information useful just took a few tries to get it to work as desired. Thanks..........

  • @EdBareff
    @EdBareff Před 8 měsíci +3

    You don't need to do all that stuff if you learn how to do photography. The raws look like the beginner took everything on auto.

    • @SignatureEdits
      @SignatureEdits  Před 8 měsíci +2

      😂😂😂 #1 - More extreme example to see the effects more obviously #2 - You're not wrong, the better you dial in your settings in camera the less you'll need this! #3 - Regardless of how good you are or how experienced you get, there are still always going to be differences in the light as you move around, shoot with / against the sun etc. Still handy to have, even if you don't need as drastic of a change!

  • @markedel6771
    @markedel6771 Před 8 měsíci

    You talk to fast