The hassle of portrait edits

Heads Up!

This article is several years old now, and much has happened since then, so please keep that in mind while reading it.

But still, I really really enjoy shooting people – with my camera of course!
The process of getting the right look on their faces, to selection and finally editing … i simply love it.

And that first part, getting the right look, can be pretty hard. I really work my ass off – especially on the “inside”.
But that’s not what I want to tell you all about … I want to share with you the “hassle” of editing portraits in Lightroom.

Hassle or no hassle?

Really it’s not a hassle per say … it’s more a process of repeating the same steps over and over again. Especially when after a wedding shoot where I return with anything from 600 to maybe 1100 shots … and you just know, that even after you’re done selecting the good ones – the ones you’ll end up delivering – a lot of them will require more or less the same kind of edits over and over again.
So to me it’s all about structure and then –of course – using the tools to my advantage.
The first step is finding “your look”. How do you want your images to look like. Do they need a specific grade (mine often do). Are you already aware of something you need to remove in most images etc.

After finding your look, you have a couple of options:

  • f you have a lot of time on your hands … go and repeat those edits to the remaining 50 images :D
  • or … you could go either the SYNC or the PRESET way.

Myself I’m more a PRESET-kind-a-guy … So I always turn my looks into a PRESET (learn about that here) because that way, I always have that PRESET available to me for further images, in other catalogues.
But once you’re happy with the look of your PRESET … you could sync that across your images.

One tool to rule them all

Now comes the fun, but sometimes tedious part, where we introduce, gradients, cloning, radial filters … and most importantly, brushes. If you know me, you’ll know I uses brushes a lot .. like I wrote about last year.
But it’s just a great tool, and definitely my go-to-tool when-ever I need to "fix" someting in an image.

Since I wrote a piece about this already last year, I thought I’d show the steps in two short videos this year.
Both videos are from the same wedding shoot, where I start from scratch and end up with the final result
And In glorious high-speed.


So … grab some popcorn and get settled

Niels Steinmeier

Niels is on Twitter as