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Range Masks in Lightroom Classic CC

Lesson 19 from: Adobe Lightroom Classic Fundamentals

Philip Ebiner

Range Masks in Lightroom Classic CC

Lesson 19 from: Adobe Lightroom Classic Fundamentals

Philip Ebiner

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Lesson Info

19. Range Masks in Lightroom Classic CC

Lessons

Class Trailer

Chapter 1: Introduction

1

Class Introduction

02:03

Chapter 2: Importing, Organizing and Filtering

2

Importing

07:19
3

Organizing with Collections

06:52
4

Rating, Flagging, and Filtering

07:24
5

Face Tagging

02:33
6

Quiz: Importing, Organizing and Filtering

Chapter 3: Editing Your Photos - The Develop Module

7

Crop and Rotate in Lightroom Classic CC

05:10
8

White Balance in Lightroom Classic CC

07:53
9

Exposure in Lightroom Classic CC

06:17
10

Color and Saturation in Lightroom Classic CC

08:37
11

Sharpening and Noise Reduction in Lightroom Classic CC

06:39
12

Vignettes, Grain and Dehaze in Lightroom Classic CC

05:31
13

Exporting in Lightroom Classic CC

09:37
14

Lens Corrections in Lightroom Classic CC

04:58
15

Split Tone in Lightroom Classic CC

05:12
16

Removing Blemishes with the Heal and Clone Tools in Lightroom Classic CC

07:39
17

Graduated, Radial and Brush Adjustments in Lightroom Classic CC

09:53
18

Adjustment Brush Presets in Lightroom Classic CC

03:02
19

Range Masks in Lightroom Classic CC

05:26
20

Quiz: Editing Your Photos - The Develop Module

Chapter 4: Editing Your Photos - Advanced Tips & Techniques

21

Using, Creating, and Importing Presets

05:24
22

Color Profiles

04:09
23

Speed Up Your Editing Workflow

03:43
24

Panorama

03:33
25

HDR

02:43
26

Automatically Fix Exposure & White Balance

01:40
27

CC 2020 Updates

04:25
28

Quiz: Editing Your Photos - Advanced Tips & Techniques

Chapter 5: Advanced Portrait Editing Techniques

29

Enhance Eyes and Change Eye Color

08:20
30

Whitening Teeth

02:47
31

Smoothing Skin

02:16
32

Removing Wrinkles

03:11
33

Enhancing Lips & Changing Lipstick Color

03:05
34

Enhancing Cheeks & Face Contouring

07:42
35

Full Portrait Edit

06:58
36

Quiz: Advanced Portrait Editing Techniques

Chapter 6: Full Photo Editing Sessions

37

Portrait of a Woman

19:37
38

Night Edit

14:36
39

Long Exposure

14:04
40

Product Photo

11:56
41

Nature

09:01
42

Action

08:06
43

Landscape

12:11
44

Travel

03:27
45

Couples Portrait

17:37
46

Architecture Photo

18:12
47

Aerial Photo

09:04
48

Street Photo

14:04
49

Macro Photo

05:53
50

Pet Photo

09:45
51

Maternity Couple Photo

12:27
52

Interior Nursery

13:07
53

Portrait of a Man

18:35
54

Sports Photo

09:32
55

Quiz: Full Photo Editing Sessions

Chapter 7:Map, Book, Slideshow, Print & Web Modules

56

The Map Module

04:19
57

The Book Module

06:24
58

The Slideshow Module

10:21
59

The Print Module

08:14
60

The Web Module

05:56
61

Quiz: Map, Book, Slideshow, Print & Web Modules

Chapter 8: Conclusion

62

Conclusion and Thank You

01:39

Final Quiz

63

Final Quiz

Lesson Info

Range Masks in Lightroom Classic CC

this lesson is all about range masks which you can find in any of these adjustments that we've been working with. I'm going to use this image to show you what you can do. Let me quickly apply what we did before say you want to make the sky even bluer. We're going to create this graduated mask or filter clicking and dragging pretty much over the whole thing and let's just adjust the temperature, make it super blue. Now I want to show you what we can do to improve this with the range mask. But first I want to show you another cool trick. If you want to make sort of a copy of your photo, so you can test out multiple edits, you can create what's called a virtual copy. Right click the photo down here in your photo tray and choose create virtual copy. This is not creating a copy on your computer. It's just creating a different version within lightroom that you can play around with and adjust. So now if I delete this graduated filter for example, we have these two photos that we can go betwee...

n and see the edits we like and that might be something you do with your photos. You might, you know, edit it one way and want to try a different edit but not want to delete your first edits and that's what a virtual copy is for. I'm going to undo. Control Z to get back that graduated filter on both images. So now I have two images that are exactly the same same graduated filter, but now with the second one, I'm going to turn on range range mask, you have two options color and luminous. You've learned similarly how this works before color allows us to adjust. Just a specific color, luminous will allow us to adjust just a specific exposure. So I'm going to choose color, then I'm going to use my eye dropper up here to click the color in the sky. You can click just once and it's going to select a specific color or you can click and drag to sort of choose a range of colors because of the sky. It goes from dark blue to light blue. I am going to pick sort of a range up here and so it is more intelligent in the colors that it's picking. You might not have noticed exactly what happened. But if I go between these two photos, let me know if you can see the difference. Well, I know you can't tell me, but let's just go back and forth. Here's the first one. Here's the second one. What changed? Well, a lot of the walt Disney Hall, that is the silver is now not being affected by this graduated filter, which is cool because adding this filter to make the sky look bluer. If it applies it to the buildings in the foreground, it just looks fake. It doesn't look real. But this one itself looks a lot more real and I like that. It is just being applied to the sky now and not as much to the silver bolo. You can adjust sort of the amount of how this is being applied. If I drag to the right, it selects more of sort of the previous image. So the building actually gets more of that adjustment. If I drag all the way to the left then less of sort of that filter is being applied, we can still see what's happening by turning this on and off, but it's being applied mostly to just the sky. Now let's go to this photo and show you how the luminous range mask works. So with this one let me turn off the split toning that we've done before and I don't believe we have any other effect on here right now. So that's good. So let's use our graduated filter and just create a graduated filter like this. So if I want to select just the sky using luminescence, what I would do is turn on the luminant range mask, let's turn on show selected mask overlay. Now this is selecting just everything up here. But we have these sliders that is selecting everything in the range of 0-100 exposure. So dragging these up or down, it can make a selection of a specific range of exposures. So if we just want to select the darks, we would drag this right part down and it would select see more. It's just selecting the darker parts down here. So that way if we want to just bring up the exposure of those dark parts, we can do so by just dragging up the exposure up here or the shadows, which might look a little bit more natural. Or if you want to just select the sky. This way, you could also use the color for this. But if we want to just select the sky and not the ground below, which is a little bit darker, you can drag up this range, something like that, that looks a little bit better. And now we can use this to make the sky even bluer and it looks a little bit more natural. Then if the range mask was off similar to what we had in the walt Disney Hall, the range mask prevents this adjustment from completely adjusting the ground below, which might not look too natural. Cool. So now you know how range mask work with both the luminous and color adjustments. Remember you can use these for both or any of the graduated radio or brush filters

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