Lr enfuse raw files12/27/2022 ![]() I really like the method but I think there may need to be some tweaking with Enfuse to get it just right. At first I wasn’t too sure, I went and had a coffee returned and it had grown on me. This is a very differnt image to the orginal. My final touch was to add a post crop vignette to soften the edges. I cropped the image slightly in to give the flower more prominence in the composition. I then created a slight split tone with a cyan blue for the highlights and a very desaturated yellow in the shadows (it is there and softens them slightly). The new file was very grey (I expected this), increasing the contrast, setting white and black points, while playing with the exposure gave me the image I have but there were so many tonal options I could have gone for. In then exported the two files to the LR Enfuse Plugin and waited for the output file. The Method involved using two copies of image both black and white but one with a negative S curve (just reversing the diagonal line in the curves palette. The method I chose was to use LR/Enfuse plugin that can be used to create focus stacked and natural HDR images. I had created this effect with Camera Raw before (Photoshop/Camera Raw Solarization) and although I was happy I wanted to experiment with different method. This creates an image that is positive and negative at the same time. In the Darkroom a solarized image was created by exposing the print twice, once with the enlarger and a second time while developing. ![]() The second part of January’s One Four Challenge I tried something I have never done in lightroom before, creating a solarized image.
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