A great Lightroom Preset not only gives an image a new lease of life and can raise its quality to the next level, but it can also drastically speed up your workflow. Emma Davenport rounds up some of the best options available for photographers tackling their post-processing.

Best Adobe Lightroom presets for photographers

Technically, your photo is sound, the exposure is spot on, the composition is solid and you’ve worked hard to get the lighting just right. But something’s not right and it just doesn’t have the punch you pictured when you were shooting it. Does this sound familiar?

Working as a professional wedding photographer the “wediting” churn throughout mid to late summer can get really overwhelming. The season always starts with great intentions to keep on top of the workload, but it’s not very long before my left eye starts gets the overtired floating blur and RSI sets in. No matter how many shortcuts are memorised, or workflow systems tweaked it always feels like the image-editing process is never fast enough.

Sure, there are plenty of places offering post-production services and if you’re more interesting shooting and spending time in the field with your clients there’s no shame in this. But, for me, it’s never felt appropriate. As well as eating into precious profits, there’s something that’s never felt quite right about completely letting go of the control of how my final images will look, and how they’re presented to my clients.

It’s not unusual to have to edit 1,000+ images over the course of a week, maybe more if you’re shooting back-to-back sessions. It’s do-able once you get into a rhythm and have your workflow perfected (I find setting myself much smaller chunks and scheduling mini breaks helps things feel a lot more achievable).

But when you have such a high volume of edits to get through on a week-by-week basis, the notion of individually working through each image from scratch, perfecting the white balance and exposure and fine-tuning curves and levels becomes massively unrealistic. After all, your clients are patiently waiting and often very excited to see the end results. That ‘Auto Sync’ button will only get you so far…

Here’s where having some really great Lightroom presets in your armoury can really help you to achieve punchier shots and a stack of time.


Lightroom presets – what are they good for?

Now, let me reiterate that a good Lightroom preset is never going to be a one-click solution to achieving a perfect image. You are always going to have to do a BIT of work to make the images sing.

I like to think of them more as an ‘primer’. They’re a quick way of checking out variations on your image you might not have thought of yourself – or simply don’t have time to do. With a lot of the groundwork done for you, a few quick adjustments can be made to suit your image and the overall look you’re going for. Most of the time, this means only have to concentrate on basic tweaks such as white balance or exposure and any spot adjustments, of course.

In Lightroom, you can fly through some options and check out the preset effects by glancing at the ‘Navigator’ preview and there’s very little lag.

Some will radically change the overall appearance of a shot; they might give your image a vintage effect, apply a radical colour cast or quickly transform your monochrome shots into black and white, or they can be really subtle and simply be a quick way to tweak your image curves or contrast.

Free Lightroom presets – why pay more?

Lightroom comes with a few presets as standard. A quick Google of ‘free lightroom presets’ will also throw up a load more. So why on earth would you ever consider paying out $100s for a set?

Freebies are great for getting your head around Lightroom presets work, but the outcomes aren’t that exciting and often quite heavy-handed. You really get what you pay for when it comes to presets. As well as technical support for photographers, many of these have been tried and tested with a particular genre of photography in mind. The more expensive presets also bundle in Lightroom profiles and make use of Adobe Look up Tables (LUTs) for more finely-tuned colour correction and grading.

Not only that, but some of the more expensive preset companies have a great community surrounding their products. You can share and get support from other photographers and educate yourself at the same time. When you’re working on your own, getting feedback from other photographers who are using exactly the same product can be invaluable and inspirational. If you can get more commissions because your work really stands out, it’s not long before these presets pay for themselves.

It might take a while for you to find some presets that really click with you and how you want to showcase your work. Here are some recommendations for places to look.

Once you get the hang of what they do, and how they enhance your work you can set about making your own versions and tweaks for future use!


Top Adobe Lightroom preset developers

Archipelago Lightroom Presets & Profiles

Price | $49-$98 per bundle

best lightroom presets - Archipelago

FourxFive preset before and after from Archipelago Presets. Photo credit: Liam Rimmington

Archipelago often fresh their presets to keep on top of the latest editing trends . Its selection is clearly split into four different looks; ‘Earthy’, ‘Modern’, ‘Moody’ and ‘Filmic’. Photographers are given extra control over the final look of their images with the addition of Creative Profiles that are offered which each bundle.

The Archipelago creative profiles allows image-editors to apply effects that are added on top of a profile. These can then be controlled with an “Amount” or intensity slider, in a similar way that you would be able to tweak an Adjustment Layer in Photoshop.

Support and guidance from Archipelago is excellent with plenty of tutorials and helpful articles to sink your teeth into. Choosing a preset is a bit like being in a sweet shop, but the handy before and after sliders make it quick to browse. The clear descriptions as to how each preset affects tone, shadows and highlights helps with the decision making too.

Works for:

  • Lightroom Classic CC (v11+)
  • Lightroom CC (V5+)
  • Adobe Photoshop ACR (v14+)

Mastin Labs

Price | $99 per bundle

Mastin Labs Lightroom Preset

Mastin Labs Quiz for helps photographers choose the right Lightroom Preset for them

As well as Desktop Lightroom, you can also purchase presets for Lightroom for Mobile, Capture One and Adobe Premiere for video editing through Mastin Labs.

Sometimes it can be difficult to see the wood for the trees when it comes to choose the most appropriate preset. Use your gut instinct to select images on its ‘preset quiz’ and it will present you with option that best suits your needs without you having to do too much research.

All preset packs come with the Mastin Magic Toolkit available. These custom tools give you more control over common problems such as improved Auto White Balance, lens correction and orange reduction (good for skin tone issues shot in warm light). Tone profiles are also supplied, inspired by the original tones of the Fuji Frontier film scanner these promise to correct contrast while preserving the look of film.

Minimum requirements:

  • Lightroom Classic 8.0
  • Lightroom CC 3.0
  • Adobe Camera RAW 10.3

Noble Presets

Price | $129-$248 per bundle

Adobe Lightroom Preset - Noble Signature Preset

‘Before’ and ‘After’ of the Noble Signature Adobe Lightroom preset. Photographers are recommended to shoot as wide open as possible (f/1.2-f/2.2) to achieve the bokeh and depth of field this preset was designed for. Photo credit: Lindsay Cotter

Specifically designed with wedding and portrait photographers in mind, Noble Presets are designed to give your images a clean, bright and airy finish.

The current offering consists of three desktop sets. ‘Noble Signature’ is designed to apply balanced to images with luminous skin tones. Images emulate the look of film with cool green and subtle contrast. ‘Noble X CHARD’ offers more warmer tones to echo the golden light of the Californian landscape. Meanwhile, ‘Noble Blk’ offers a dedicated black and white set of presets. Added grain effects can be added to give images a ‘shot on Medium formt’ feel.

Photographers are invited to send in their own images to the Noble team before committing to purchasing a preset with a complimentary test edit.

Works for:

  • Adobe Lightroom 4 or later
  • Adobe Camera Raw CS6 or later
  • Adobe Lightroom Classic & CC 1.4 or later

dvlop

Price | $125-$190 per bundle

An exhaustive selection of Adobe Lightroom presets are offered through the dvlop with creations from some of the most respected photographers in the wedding industry, including Jose Villa, Jonas Peterson, Sam Hurd and The Kitcheners.

You could get lost for hours looking through all the presets here. But click on a photographer’s style that catches your eye and you can clearly see some before and after previews with good technical explanations as to how the preset will modify your image. You can even find some bundled video tutorials from the likes of Nirav Patel’s ‘Lotus’ collection.

Check out the ‘Tweaks and Leaks’ set for something a little bit different. Here, dvlop has made use of Adobe’s profile browser to apply non-destructive effects over raw files. These leaks are hand painted additions using the radial gradient tool. A leak’s opacity can be adjusted and its colour modified for a completely custom look.

Dvlop - Two Mann Studios

‘Before’ (top) and ‘After’ (bottom) image processed using a Dvlop preset. Photo credit: © Two Mann Studios

Works for:

  • Adobe Lightroom 4 or later (Classic)
  • Adobe Camera Raw 10.3 or later
  • Adobe Lightroom CC Desktop 11.4 or later and Mobile (Non-Classic)

Loox

Price | $9-29 per package

Adobe Lightroom Preset - Loox Nordic

‘Before’ and ‘After’ of the NORDIC Adobe Lightroom preset from Loox. Designed to enhance blue tones and create a contrasted, cold vibe.

At $29 per set (currently on sale for an even more affordable £8/$9), you can afford to get experimental with the selections from Loox. Styles are easy to view and range from the great, simple ‘WHT PRODUCT’ designed to create clean looks for e-commerce through to the cold, enchanced blue tones of ‘NORDIC’, with the travel and landscape photographer in mind.

Do you have a designated Instagram account for your pooch? ‘ The ‘PUPPY’ presets have been especially created to edit dog photos. We’ve only just scraped the service. With so many styles on offer here, there’s bound to be something to suit most photography styles.

Individual packages through Loox normally contain 8 presets, although there are also bundles available at discounted prices. As well as working for Adobe Lightroom, the Loox presets can also be used with Photoshop Camera Raw for Mac (.xmp).

Adobe Lightroom Preset - Loox 'WHT PRODUCT'

‘Before’ and ‘After’ of the WHT PRODUCT Adobe Lightroom preset from Loox. Designed to give a simple, contrasted, clean look to products for e-commerce photography.

Works for:

  • iOs, Mac & Windows
  • Lightroom Classic / Lightroom CC (.xmp).
  • Older versions of Lightroom Class (from LR6)
  • Camera Raw on Mac and Desktop (.xmp)
  • JPEG/RAW

Looking for other photo editing advice? Check out these other articles:

How to organise your photos with Lightroom
Best free photo editing software for computers and mobile 2022
How to convert images to black and white in Lightroom


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