GregJ
Greg Johnson
- Joined
- Jul 11, 2011
- Messages
- 647
- Location
- San Antonio, TX
- Lightroom Experience
- Power User
- Lightroom Version
- Cloud Service
- Lightroom Version Number
- Latest Classic
- Operating System
- Windows 11
I'm shooting right now on a trip and will be editing heavily in LR every night and morning for the next 5 weeks. I shoot a lot of city scenic shots with parallel lines structures and lines both vertical and horizontal and am aware on every shot to keep my camera level and sensor level to avoid key-stoning as much as possible (unless I want it).
In post, I almost always apply auto in the Transform Module. I have noticed over the years that it has become much better in figuring out exactly what I need automatically. It does a great job at straightening my framing mistakes and keeps me from having to draw lines with the Guided Upright Tool as much as I used to.
When I'm editing a shot and apply the edits to the next ten shots that are similarly lit (as an example) as a good start point, everything copies over except the auto Transform. To apply that, I have to go through every shot and click on "update". That is OK, because I must see on every image if it works or not. It usually does, but sometimes causes chaos and I remove it.
But is there any way to apply the command to all the images without having to then click on update? I would rather do that and then cruise through the images and if I see one that was applied badly, I can just turn it off, instead of having to click on update on every image.
In post, I almost always apply auto in the Transform Module. I have noticed over the years that it has become much better in figuring out exactly what I need automatically. It does a great job at straightening my framing mistakes and keeps me from having to draw lines with the Guided Upright Tool as much as I used to.
When I'm editing a shot and apply the edits to the next ten shots that are similarly lit (as an example) as a good start point, everything copies over except the auto Transform. To apply that, I have to go through every shot and click on "update". That is OK, because I must see on every image if it works or not. It usually does, but sometimes causes chaos and I remove it.
But is there any way to apply the command to all the images without having to then click on update? I would rather do that and then cruise through the images and if I see one that was applied badly, I can just turn it off, instead of having to click on update on every image.