top of page
Search
conkufejac1979

Lightroom Dehaze – part 2: A Simple Tool with Multiple Applications



- Enhance portrait photos easily with advanced AI technology- Fix photo exposure and white balance issues automatically- Optimize photo colors and perfect photo tints- Make photos perfectly clear with smart dehaze- Boost photo lighting and color quality- Process RAW and JPG files


After your blurry photos are loaded into the software, you need to click on the settings gear button at the top right corner of the screen to turn on the features of "Automatic Lens Correction", "Face enhance" and/or "Enlarge eyes". This will allow you to use the software to dehaze pictures intelligently. The effect adjuster bar can be dragged to the left or to the right to dehaze your photos to a proper degree.




Lightroom Dehaze – part 2




Run Lightroom on your computer and then drag & drop a hazy image that you want to dehaze Lightroom to the software. Generally, distant landscapes or coastal scenes are always not clear when the weather conditions are not good.


If you would like to make pictures clearer after you shot them, you can use Photoshop to sharpen your pictures. If you shot pictures when the weather condition was not good, you can also resort to another professional tool or a program for beginners to dehaze your images at ease to gain satisfying results. Also, you can use two methods introduced in the previous parts to make photos clearer.


There are also two features that have slightly different implementations and (of course) names than their LrC counterparts. The first is what as known as Snapshots in LrC are known as Versions in Lr. You can read more about Versions, but just like Snapshots they allow you to preserve an editing state so that you can create different versions within the source photo. The other feature known as Virtual Copies in LrC is not exactly the same in Lr, but it is possible to create a duplicate of the photo and edit it separately from the original (and creating a duplicate is only possible in Lr for Mac/Win not on mobile). If you are a long term LrC user you may rely heavily on Virtual Copies, Snapshots, and the History panel and the implementation of those features in Lr is not nearly as robust as in LrC.


In Lightroom 7, in the Develop module, make sure you are using the current process which is Version 4. If you see a small lightning bolt next to your adjustment brushes, you do not have the current version. Click on the lightning bolt and Lightroom will offer to update to the current version. You can also find you what version you have by looking in the Settings menu under Process. There is also a menu option to update to the current process. In the Camera Calibration area in the adjustment panel on the right, it also tells you what version you are using. Note that all images that were in lightroom before the new version came out must be updated to the new process.


Just to be sure, are you paying a monthly subscription? The screenshot that was posted indicates that you have a perpetual license. The perpetual license version of Lightroom does not have the dehaze filter. So that seems to be confusing because Lightroom Classic is not a perpetual license. It is a subscription-based version.


Lightroom 6, ANY VERSION OF LIGHTROOM 6 INCLUDING ANY UPDATE, doesn't have the dehaze tool! Lightroom 6 never did, and never will have, the dehaze tool. The dehaze tool was added to the "old" Lightroom CC and is part of Lightroom Classic CC. But it was never added to Lightroom 6.


I have no idea who this someone is. But I can assure you that the dehaze tool has never been part of the standalone version of Lightroom 6. You can do a web search and find some third-party plug-ins that will add a dehaze filter. But there have been very lengthy discussions/complaints/misunderstandings from users who purchased Lightroom 6 thinking they would get the dehaze filter. And all efforts to try to explain why they didn't get it have been futile. In short, the dehaze filter IS NOT, and never will be part of Lightroom 6. After all, there will be no more updates to Lightroom 6 now anyway.


Make sure the process version on the image you are looking at is at version 3 or 4. The dehaze slider will be greyed out in other process versions. Also make absolutely sure that you haven't by accident installed Lightroom CC which is a completely new and different app than Lightroom 2015 CC was and Lightroom Classic is and where the dehire slider is in a different place.


I am also missing the dehaze slider as well. I just upgraded from lightroom 6 to classic cc. I uninstalled 6 then installed classic cc. When i open classic cc it says lightroom 6 verion 7.0 and on the top right it says lightroom 7, not classic cc. Any help would be awesome


That is weird! v. 1140024 is the correct version but you have a lightning bolt as splash screen you say? I would shut down lightroom, go into the creative cloud and log out of your account and back in. It is strange that it shows you running a trial version.


It seems that im running a trail version because in the cc app it says buy now next to all 3 apps. Classic cc photoshop cc and lightroom cc. Ive already logged out and reinstalled all the apps. Im at a loss when i got to buy now it says ive already purchased photography package.


ExpertPhotography is part of several affiliate sales networks. This means we may receive a commission if you purchase something by clicking on one of our links.ExpertPhotography is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com.As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.


The new Dehaze feature does exactly what the name implies. It will increase or decrease the feeling of haze in your photos, whether from mist or particles in the water. For underwater photography, we are primarily interested in removing the reeling of haze in order to increase sharpness / clarity lost underwater.


The Detail panel consists of three main sections: there is a Navigation Window, a Sharpening section, and a Noise Reduction section (Figure 6). The Navigation Window provides a constant 1:1 view of a given part of your image. Simply click on the on the window to zoom in or out, or you can use the small cross-hair target in the upper left of the panel to manually select an area of the image for you to zoom into.


Another second class Adobe citizen. I heard that they are interpreting some law or regulation that says they cannot offer new features w/o some sort of payment. Sounds like a good legal sounding excuse to me. I do have to say that some of my fellow LUG members have posted dehazed shots and I was not impressed. Yours is the first example that I would say makes me wish I had that tool.


For me the Loupedeck really shines when it comes to editing. I could easily go without it for the previous stages of my workflow, but image processing is it strong point and apart from speeding up the whole process, it made it more enjoyable. Editing our images is an important step in the photographic process, but it is not my favorite part, I much prefer to be underwater taking the shots. So I find I have to be in the right mood to sit down for a long editing session and the Loupedeck will make this much less of a chore if I am not in the right mood.


Adobe photoshop dehaze is an advancement for professional photographers. Days are gone when photography schedules were canceled due to fog, mist, and more. Shots taken irrespective of place and time are adjustable and can be restored with the original background details just in no time.


The Dehaze in Adobe Lightroom is among the most dynamic and functional tools having the capability of creating far beyond what curves and clarity sliders in Lightroom can do. It creates robust images revealing the hidden details that one cannot view with own eyes while capturing the photo. The global tool adds saturation to the whole picture; however, the dehaze effects can be applied locally with adjustment brush or the graduated filter tool.


De-hazing should be just perfectly applied with the correct ratio and balance with other effects. It can prove to be a little tricky if you are not fully aware of its effects. As part of our Photoshop services and Lightroom services, at Smart Photo Editors (SPE) we make use of the Dehaze tool to accomplish your photography goal as expected. Our photo editing experts use Adobe Lightroom CC Dehaze Tool, Adobe photoshop dehaze, and Dehaze lightroom classic cc to deliver the clean and naturally colored images you need. Contact us today to know more about our Dehazing services.


You can find the Dehaze tool in the Basic panel in Adobe Lightroom CC Classic. In the latest versions of Lightroom Classic, you can also take the help of artificial intelligence to selectively mask parts of a photo and apply the Dehaze corrections.


Selectively dehazing a photo is always better than using the slider aggressively on an entire image. For instance, use the AI-powered masking and dehaze combination on a dull sky. We use the steps below to only illustrate the dehaze slider in the Masking panel.


This is a simple illustration of the dehaze feature. The Masking panel in Lightroom has more advanced options that allow you to finetune the "dehazed" look in combination with the Adjustment sliders, but those are beyond the scope of this article. Refer to the Adobe Lightroom Help page for a deeper understanding of its capabilities.


You are totally right. Even I found myself drowning in the vortex of the appealing de-haze slider, only to realise (gladly not too late) that it is tool that simplifies what I practiced from years ago when the slider was not there. I used my long ACR routine to lessen haze mostly when I shot from a plane. Overdone in normal situations, it kills all the atmosphere of the photograph. Fiddling around with the blacks slider is the most prominent part of it. 2ff7e9595c


0 views0 comments

Recent Posts

See All

Comentarios


bottom of page