![]() ![]() Definitely a nice lens for shooting portraits. I’m shooting with the Tamron 85mm 1.8 and it gives me a nice kinda look at her face. It was difficult to overpower the lights from overhead, but we had a Westcott FJ400 Strobe from behind and then I would bring in a little Litra light to open up her face a bit. ![]() It was kinda a tough lighting situation because you’ve got all those overhead lights in the convention center. These images are from a shoot that we did at the Tamron booth at WPPI. Let’s take a look at my process, see exactly how I get an image from Photoshop, move it into Luminar and get an image out of Luminar. You don’t need Photoshop or Lightroom to run this program – it can work as a stand alone way to sort your images, edit your images and really give you an experience just like Lightroom and Photoshop in a very quick compact way to apply those edits. As a stand alone product it’s already an amazing price. You can save $10 on it by using the discount code LuminarTSL10. Special shout out to Luminar and Tamron who are sponsoring this video. ![]() You can do it all very quickly in this program. It used to be a very long process, but I’m really excited to see a simplified version from Luminar 4 that allows you to edit portraits and do it quickly to be able to apply some of the same things that take 3 or 4 steps in photoshop. You know, I shoot a ton of people, and because I shoot so many people it seems like I spend a tremendous amount of time retouching portraits. Hey it’s Jay P Morgan here on The Slanted Lens and today I’m going to show you my editing process using both photoshop and Luminar 4 to edit portraits! ![]()
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