All of the Luxe branded collections come with collection-specific brushes. What is even better, is that you can buy readily available brushes to speed up local adjustment work. Lightroom already has some effects built in, but you can also create your own and access them via the dropdown menu just on the right of the "Effects" badge (shows the word "Zero" above, as no sliders have been yet adjusted). What’s great about the adjustment brush is that Lightroom allows us to create and reuse adjustment brush presets. Imagine any adjustment you may want to make to a part of your image and you will be able to just that with this fantastic combination of sliders. Mask: This is where we choose a new adjustment (default selection is in white lettering when we first access the adjustment brush tool) or edit an existing one.Įffect: Contains a bewildering number of adjustment sliders. Each has its very own purpose that I explain below: It is divided into Mask, Effect, and Brush subareas. This is how the adjustment brush menu looks: The shortcut for fast access is the letter "K". Then, click the far-right tool in the tool pallet, just below the histogram panel. To access the adjustment brush, you must be in the Develop module. It goes miles beyond what its name implies, as it can easily adjust single or multiple photographic parameters like exposure settings, white balance, sharpness, contrast/clarity and so on. Unlike global adjustments, the adjustment tool selects and modifies specific image areas. Getting acquainted to its use will let you significantly extend the amount of manipulation you can do without having to leave Lightroom.
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The adjustment brush tool in Lightroom is one of its most powerful editing tools. An introduction to Lightroom's Adjustment Brush Tool