A great photo is only half-made in camera. Post-processing is where you bring your creative vision to life. Here’s a simple, repeatable workflow that works whether you use Lightroom, Capture One, or even free mobile apps like Snapseed.
Step 1: Crop and Straighten
Before touching any sliders, fix your framing. Straighten the horizon. Crop out distractions at the edges. This simple step improves 90% of photos instantly.
Cropping and straightening is always the first step in any editing workflow
Step 2: Exposure and White Balance
- Exposure: Adjust until the image looks natural — not too bright, not too dark
- Highlights: Pull down to recover blown-out skies
- Shadows: Lift slightly to reveal detail in dark areas
- White balance: Warm it up for golden hour, cool it down for moody blues
Step 3: Contrast and Clarity
- Contrast: +10 to +25 adds punch without looking overdone
- Clarity: +15 to +30 enhances midtone detail — great for architecture and landscapes
- Dehaze: Use sparingly (+10 to +20) for foggy or hazy shots — common in Vietnam’s humid climate
Step 4: Color
- Vibrance: Boosts muted colors without oversaturating skin tones (+15 to +30)
- Saturation: Use carefully — a little goes a long way (+5 to +10 max)
- HSL panel: Fine-tune individual colors. Make skies deeper blue, greens more vibrant, oranges warmer
Fine-tuning colors in post-processing brings your creative vision to life
Step 5: Sharpening and Export
- Sharpening: Amount 40–60, Radius 1.0, for most photos
- Noise reduction: Luminance 20–40 for high-ISO shots
- Export: JPEG at 90% quality for web, full-size TIFF for prints
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Over-saturating colors — if skin looks orange, you’ve gone too far
- Crushing blacks — keep some shadow detail for a natural look
- Over-sharpening — creates ugly halos around edges
- Editing on an uncalibrated screen — colors will look different everywhere else
Free Tools Worth Trying
- Snapseed (mobile) — Surprisingly powerful, great for quick edits
- RawTherapee (desktop) — Free, open-source RAW editor
- Darktable (desktop) — Lightroom alternative, completely free
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