Thanks, Alexander – it’s an interesting and thought provoking post. Visit our User Guide to learn more about Styles and Presets in details. Let the creative juices flow and see what you can achieve with Styles! You might be surprised how it can save you time in the long run. I have found that understated adjustments that can be enhanced after applying a Style work better than overly adjusted Styles that I need to tone down. It might be a little less contrast in the curves, or a bigger change in the blue hue to affect the sky. If the adjustments don’t look amazing on the rest of the images, figure out what to tweak to make them more useful – without sacrificing what you’re aiming for. Saving the adjustments as a Style from the Styles and Presets Tool You can even create subfolders within the Styles folder to organize your Styles. © Ausra Babiedaiteĭo they still look amazing on the other images? If yes, then you’re good to go! Save your new Style and give it a fitting name. Identical adjustments applied to different images. This can be done using ‘Cmd/Ctrl + C’ for copying adjustments and ‘Cmd/Ctrl + V’ for applying them. You need to test your Style! Find a handful of other images shot under different conditions, maybe even different cameras if you use more than one, and apply the adjustments on these. Hold on, freeze! This is a crucial stage. It’s tempting to save your adjustments immediately when they look amazing on your image. You can of course experiment and include anything you want in a Style, but my guess is that you will quite quickly agree that the tools above should be excluded from any Style you create.
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