How to Use Adobe Light­room Classic’s Col­or Grad­ing – Guide

Adobe has just released a new Lightroom variant that eliminates the division conditioning module and replaces it with an updated version, “Color Grading”. Within this update are some minor changes, incorporating live linking with explicit Canon cameras, adding several new cameras to its help list, more developed designs to increase handling speed, and more developed zoom included within Lightroom. I cover this momentarily and delve a little deeper into the new “scrubby” zoom in the video, so be sure to look at them in case you’re intrigued. ..

Find the color gradation guide

The New Color Gradation tab in the Develop module lets you change the color gradient of your images. You can choose a range of colors to create a gradient, or use a single color to create a complete image.

The new Split Toning tab has replaced the OLD Toning tab.

Color Sorting Wheels

You can now adjust the shadows, midtones and highlights of your photos in a new tab called Shadows, Midtones and Highlights. ..

You can also work with all the sliders at the same time, but I prefer to work with each control individually just to have more control over each area of the image. ..

The global wheel can be used to change the entire image, affecting all colors in a way that is not desired.

To use the Luminance slider to control the brightness of an image, you’ll need to first adjust its Contrast slider.

The new blending slider

Now that they’ve added the new slider called “Blend”, it will take all the colors you selected for shadows, midtones and highlights and will mix them.

I will recommend using it at the bottom instead of setting it to 100.

Start color grading

To start color grading, I added cool tones to the image. You can see in the configuration below that I added the blue color to the image shadows. Now you can also play around with the luminance slider to get a lighter or darker color.

I increased the warmth of the midtones, using the midtone wheel. You can see the settings below.

I added a warmer color to the Highlights to make skin tones more natural and surprising.

The results of the experiment are now clear. After four days of fasting, the subjects’ blood pressure was lower than before. Their heart rate was also lower, and they were more alert.

Final note

Adobe Lightroom Classic’s color grading capabilities are powerful and can help you create beautiful photos with just a few clicks. This guide will show you how to use the color grading tools in Lightroom Classic to achieve the look you want. If you have any questions about this article, feel free to ask us in the comments below or on our Facebook page. Finally, please share this article with your friends so they can learn how to use Lightroom Classic’s color grading features too! ..