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  • Hi this is Lance, with TipsforRealEstatePhotography.com.

  • And today we are going to use Lightroom to blend some real estate

  • photos together. Now if you haven't set up Lightroom, I would highly

  • suggestion you head over to TipsForRealEstatePhotography.com and

  • look for the post called Software Setup for Post Processing. That should

  • get you on your way for what we are going to cover in this tutorial. So

  • let's go ahead and open up Lightroom and we are going to create a new

  • catalog for this particular job that we are doing. So, I always create a new

  • catalog within the directory of the particular shoot. So all of my real

  • estate shoots have their own directory. And I name the catalog after the same

  • name of the directory that I am putting it in to. You can check out some of my

  • naming conventions and the way that I organize my files at

  • TipsForRealEstatePhotography.com. After we click create, Lightroom is

  • going to go ahead and create a new catalog for us, and the first thing we are going

  • to want to do is import all of our photos from the real estate shoot. I have put

  • them in an originals folder, and once we click on it we can see all of the photos

  • from the shoot. Now this is actually a good photo shoot to go over because there

  • are a lot of color issues with lighting so we'll make some adjustments during the

  • post processing example here to kind of show you some of the things you can do

  • to help solve some color temperature issues. What I'm going to do is, we can

  • see all of our brackets here. I've got seven photos for this particular frame,

  • I have seven more down here, and what we are going to do is we are going to go

  • through and we are going to uncheck photos that I don't need. Photos that I

  • don't need are going to be ones that are way underexposed or way overexposed. So

  • I'm going to go ahead and uncheck the ones that are underexposed, because we probably

  • don't need them. It's not going to hurt if we have them in there, but the least amount

  • of photos that we pull in, the quicker it's probably going to run, and I know

  • just based off experience that I don't actually need those lower exposures. Now

  • you can try them if you want... What I'm actually doing here is when I'm clicking

  • on a particular frame, I'm holding shift and I'm clicking on my second frame, and

  • then I'm hitting the tilde key, that's right underneath escape. The top left.

  • That's the shortcut to uncheck those photos that you have selected. So let's

  • go through here and uncheck these. Now this one right here, this photo here

  • just from glancing at it, it looks pretty overexposed, but I think it's going to be

  • fine so we are just going to remove these two lower exposed ones and just continue

  • our trend with what we are doing by removing the bottom two. Now this one,

  • this one actually looks way, over exposed to me. So I'm going to go ahead and leave

  • that one out of the selection, and then so I'll be actually removing one that's

  • under exposed and one that's over exposed. Again this is to end up with a five

  • bracketed shot. A five exposure bracketed shot. Same with this one, I'm going to

  • remove the lowest and the highest one. Or the darkest and the brightest I guess

  • you would say. Continuing on... Just going down the list here of all of the photos

  • that I have. Again just if it's.. I'm basically my, what my eye is doing is I'm

  • looking at this exposure, the brightest exposure and I'm asking myself, is it too

  • bright? If it is, then I'll remove it plus I'll remove the least exposed shot. If

  • it's not too bright, if I think a lot of detail is still there then I'll just go

  • ahead and keep it and I'll remove the two under exposed shots in the set. So we are

  • almost through here getting through.. getting toward the master bath here and

  • some of the guest rooms. Now we are to our exteriors. Now, what I normally do

  • with these, is I normally edit usually a single frame, sometimes I will blend

  • them together. It normally depends on the wind. If it's really windy outside

  • I try to use a single frame for editing because when you blend them together

  • if you have trees, the branches and leaves are going to be blowing in the

  • wind so when you blend them together they get blurry. So I'm going to go

  • ahead and keep just a single frame for these. That was the back yard, these

  • two photos here. This last group of three, this is the front shot that I

  • have and I'm actually going to blend these together, so I'm not going to

  • use this one right here because it is so bright and over exposed, but I am

  • going to use this one, and I'm going to use this one and I'm going to

  • blend them together. And that's just a personal preference. You could

  • probably get away with just taking this darker exposure and you would

  • be able to modify and edit this to get to a nice image. But I'm going

  • to go ahead and blend them together. So, after we have all of our photos

  • selected that we want to import into our catalog - let me bump

  • this down a little bit - we are going to go over here to the setting where

  • it says apply during import. And I'm going to click on develop settings

  • and I'm going to go to user presets and click on Auto Lens Profile. Now

  • this is actually a profile that I made during the previous post on

  • setting up the software for post- processing so go check that out

  • to see what it is doing. And for meta data I'm going to select

  • UEP which is my business name which is Unique Exposure Photography

  • that has my copyright information, my name in there and that type of

  • thing. These two pieces of information are going to be applied to all of the

  • photos that we import. So let's go ahead and click import, and it's

  • going to pull them all into our catalog. And we are going to scroll

  • all the way to the bottom. And we are going to start at the end. And I'll

  • show you why here in a second. What I'm going to do is I'm going to actually

  • pull all of our frames and put them into stacks. Because when we have them

  • in stacks, that how the enfuse plugin is going to know which photos to blend

  • together. So, the reason that I go backwards is because A, it's easier

  • the way that the user interface works when I stack these together, when I

  • stack these together it's easier and quicker for me to go backwards. But

  • also, whatever image you have selected first in the stack, so you can see that

  • this one down here number thirty-four, that one is a little bit brighter than

  • this one, one-thirty-three. That, this first image that I selected is actually

  • going to become the top of the stack. So I want the brightest image to be on

  • the top of the stack because that's going to be most visible to me once

  • all of my photos are stacked. Now in order to stack them together, I'm going

  • to go up to, Photo stacking and group into stack. Now I normally just use the

  • shortcut code so that's why it took me a little bit to find this but, if you

  • just want to figure out how to apply that particular shortcut code it will go

  • a lot quicker rather than using the menu. So when I stack them together you'll see

  • that it bunches them together. I have two photos in this stack. And I'm just

  • going to go down the line and for all of my photos I'm just going to stack

  • them all together. So for each room, we just go from the brightest shot

  • to the darkest, and we use our shortcut code, or our shortcut key to group them

  • together. And you'll see that my first image of the stack that I select which

  • is the brightest one, that ends up being the top photo of the stack. And that's

  • what we want because it looks the best, it's easier to see what shot it is.

  • So after we have all of these stacked together, now what we are actually

  • going to do is we are going to go through and adjust the color

  • temperature. So, I'm going to start and I'm going to right click and I'm

  • going to go to stacking and I am going to expand all stacks. So it's

  • going to open them all back up again. I scroll down to the bottom,

  • and I click on my first photo in the stack and I hold shift and I click

  • on the second one, so I'm selecting both stacks. I'm going to go ahead

  • and click on this photo right here so I have that one selected, and I'm

  • going to go to develop, and once this pulls up, I'm going to make sure that

  • at the bottom here, that it says Auto Sync. If I click this little toggle

  • switch and it says Sync here, that means that it is not going to Auto

  • Sync the photos that I have selected. So I want to toggle it to make sure

  • it says Auto Sync. And all I'm going to do here is I'm going to adjust

  • the color temperature. Now it actually looks fine, so I don't really need

  • to do anything. OK so when we move over to our first set, again I'm going

  • to click on the first exposure here in this stack, I'm going to hold shift

  • and click on the beginning exposure over here. So I have all of the photos

  • in the stack selected. I'm going to adjust the white balance by clicking

  • on the eye dropper tool and clicking on something that I know is white

  • from the photo. And then I'm just going to make some personal adjustments

  • based off of how it turns out. You might prefer something warmer, you

  • might prefer something cooler. Clicking on the eye dropper is just a way to, as

  • a starting point, and you as the photographer can make the further or

  • more detailed white balance adjustments as you see fit. Again, make sure that

  • you have Auto Sync showing here or else it will not sync across all your

  • photos. So I'm just going to go through and click on to adjust the temperature

  • for some of these. Now, sometimes what happens is, since we aren't using

  • any additional lighting here, and we're just using the light that is available

  • to us, we will have a lot of cold light or blue light that comes in from outside.

  • And it can put a lot of blue into our particular photo. Now this one is not

  • too bad, but you can see some of these areas up here get a little blue. The

  • way to fix that, is you can go down to saturation, and you can hit and take

  • down the saturation of the blue channel. Now obviously if there are a lot, if there

  • is a lot of blue in that particular room, if the walls are blue, or if the

  • furniture is blue, you want to be really be careful on how much you actually make

  • that adjustment because you are going to be making that adjustment to the entire

  • blue channel. So I'm just looking to try to find where to put the eye dropper

  • tool and that looks OK but it just looks a little purple to me, so I'm going to

  • drop, drop it down, add a little green into it. And again this one, just based

  • off of looking at these thumbnails, I can see quite a bit of blue in there.

  • It's not too bad, but it's enough to make me want to come down and go to

  • saturation and knock it down a little bit. And again all of those settings

  • are going to be synced across all of the photos.

  • You'll notice in this one here I actually have my camera showing. One of the tips

  • that I can give you is if you doing a bathroom where you have no choice

  • but to be in a mirror, try to be in the mirror where the background is a

  • solid color. You can see here that the background wall here is solid, so

  • that's going to be really easy for me to take this piece of equipment out

  • in Photoshop. I'm not going to do it in Lightroom and I'm not going to do

  • it right now. After we blend this photo together and we have it looking

  • the way we want it, then we'll make that final step to remove that tripod

  • out of there. This is a good example of a lot of blue

  • showing, we can see it on the floor here and coming in through the windows.

  • And you can really see it down in these thumbnails. So again just go down to

  • saturation and knock down the blue channel by quite a bit.