Uncover the power of Adobe Lightroom's sharpening features in this engaging tutorial. Whether you're retouching a portrait or enhancing landscape details, this guide walks you through sharpening techniques within the Detail panel and selective sharpening via masking.
Key Insights
- The tutorial covers key features including sharpening within the Detail panel and selective sharpening using a mask.
- Users first import photos into the Library module and select a specific image for editing.
- In the Detail panel, the sharpening amount can be adjusted for desired effect, with a suggested starting point of 65.
- Users can compare the effect of their changes by toggling the switch at the top-left corner of the Detail panel.
- For selective sharpening, the Masking slider in the Detail panel activates the mask attribute.
- Sharpening masks are particularly useful when sharpening particular elements like eyes in portraits, without affecting other areas like skin.
Gain in-depth knowledge about Lightroom's sharpening features in this tutorial, covering topics such as sharpening within the Detail panel and using a mask to sharpen parts of a photo.
This exercise is excerpted from Noble Desktop’s past Lightroom training materials and is compatible with Lightroom updates through 2020. To learn current skills in Lightroom, check out our Photo Retouching Certificate and graphic design classes in NYC and live online.
Topics Covered in This Lightroom Tutorial:
Sharpening Within the Detail Panel, Sharpening Part of the Photo Using a Mask
Exercise Preview
Exercise Overview
In this exercise, you’ll learn how to use Lightroom’s sharpening features.
Sharpening Within the Detail Panel
- If you have not imported the photos that were imported in Exercise 2E:
- Go into the Library module.
- At the bottom left of the screen, click Import.
- In the dialog box that appears, on the left under Source, navigate to Desktop > Class Files > Lightroom Class and select the Develop folder.
- At the top, above the photos, make sure Add is selected (highlighted).
- On the bottom right, click Import.
Press G to go into the Library module’s Grid View, if you’re not already there.
Click on the three chimneys photo (_CAS4871).
Press D to go into the Develop module.
At the top of the Navigator panel on the left, click on 1:1 to view the image at 100%.
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Still in the Navigator panel, drag the bounding box over the top middle of the leftmost chimney:
On the right, expand the Detail panel if it isn’t already.
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Under Sharpening, drag the Amount slider all the way to the right to 150, just to test it out.
Way too sharp.
Click on 150 so the setting is editable.
Type 65 and press Return (Mac) or Enter (Windows) to change it.
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At the top-left corner of the Detail panel, click the Switch
off and on to notice the difference.
Much better!
Sharpening Part of the Photo Using a Mask
But what if we didn’t want to sharpen the entire photo—just the darker parts (corners, shadows, edges)?
In the Detail panel, click on the Masking slider to activate that attribute.
Hold the Opt (Mac) or ALT (Windows) key while dragging the slider slowly to the right to reveal the mask.
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You can press Opt (Mac) or ALT (Windows) on and off while holding the slider; pressing it reveals the mask, and not pressing shows the photo. In the mask, areas that are black will have NO sharpening applied.
TIP: Sharpening masks are very useful for sharpening faces such as when you want to sharpen the eyes, but not the skin.
Set the Masking to 75.
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In the top-left corner of the Detail panel, click the Switch
off and on a few times to view a quick before-and-after.
Neato!