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Make your personal edits to our presets

All photos are different, so while our presets may look great with many of your photos, some may benefit from making minor tweaks to things like exposure, vibrance, texture etc. to look their best!

Try the Masking tool in Lightroom

Lightroom’s Masking tool allows you to select only the subject or only the sky, rather than the entire photo, so you can specifically highlight the most important parts of the photo, while leaving the rest as is. 

“Framing” your photo

When taking a photo, look for something with a straight edge like the side of a building, the corner of a wall, a door trim etc. and line your phone up with it. This creates a natural frame, and gives your photo a cleaner, more professional look. 

Look for unique details

Finding unique details that most people may overlook will help make a more creative looking, more interesting photo. 

Natural lighting

Natural lighting, natural lighting, NATURAL LIGHTING!! The best looking photos are usually captured with natural lighting. This is a general rule for great looking pics, and that definitely applies to most of our presets! Outdoor photos, especially with a bright blue sky full of fluffy white clouds, just make the best pics!

Don’t zoom in

Zooming in will make your photos appear blurry and grainy. Try to get closer to your subject, rather than zooming in, for clear, crisp photos. 

Portrait Mode

Use Portrait Mode to put the emphasis on your subject, especially when there’s a busy background. Plus, Portrait Mode always makes a photo look more professional! 

Candid moments

Telling your subject to look and smile is great, but sometimes, try to catch your subject in the moment, especially when they’re having a real laugh!

Angles

When taking pictures of your littles, crouch down so you can take their photo straight on or even angled up, rather than standing and angling your phone down at them. 

Positioning

When you’re photographing both a subject and an interesting background, position your subject close to the camera and to the side of the photo, allowing space on the other half of the photo for the background. Or, if you have a symmetrical background, place your subject in the center, with equal amounts of background on each side. 

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