Lr Enfuse Plugin

Hi gang – and howdy from Charlotte, North Carolina (here for my seminar today). So, last week I had Real Estate photographer Thomas Grubba as my guest on “The Grid” (our life weekly talk show for photographers), and he was talking about how he uses a Lightroom plug-in called:

  1. That is correct, I import the RAW files and stack them in Lightroom, and then use the Enfuse plugin-in to batch blend the stacks. Enfuse may not blend RAW files and the plug-in may export as a different format in the background? But I’m not sure as that’s all behind-the-scenes. I do export to JPG for editing in Photomatix (tutorial to come.
  2. Lr Enfuse Download Serial Number DOWNLOAD (Mirror #1) lr enfuse serial numberenfuse plugin serial numberlr enfuse download serial numberenfuse serial number. Jun 02, 2015 Run Lr, select Edit Plug-in manager, at the bottom of the left hand panel, select add, which opens a browser box, and navigate to where you put the LR/Enfuse folder above.

“Enfuse”

It’s from a developer in the UK, and it’s what Thomas uses to take his bracketed real estate photography images and merge them into a single image with a realistic look. He was really raving about it, so I tried it myself and it’s pretty amazing (most of the time). Best of all, it’s “Donationware” (there’s no set price – you give what you want to the developer).

In essence the LR/Enfuse plugin allows you to combine multiple exposures into one image, and I use it in three different ways: 1) HDR HDR is an acronym for ‘ High Dynamic Range ‘ and essentially refers to making several images of the same scene at. 2) Movement I’ve done three blog posts now on ‘. Jun 26, 2013 Then opened Plug-in Extras, clicked on Blend exposures using LR/Enfuse. Configuration Panel opened. From there I'm confused, the Enfuse Images buttion on the bottom is greyed out. I mirrored the configuration page exactly like shown in the install directions and the Enfuse Images buttion is.

Here’s a few quick results (no toning was done to any of these – just the initial merge, so you can do a lot to these examples. The first one will be Lightroom’s built-in “Merge to HDR” followed by the Enfuse plug-in.

Note: Ignore the ghosting – I didn’t address it in any of these examples.

Above:Lightroom’s Merge to HDR feature

Above:Same images merged using the “Enfuse” plug-in

Above:The same image with Lightroom Merge to HDR but with the AUTO TONE turned on.

Above:The Enfuse image with Auto Tone added.

Enfuse

Above:Lightroom’s Merge to HDR version.

Above:the same images merged in “Enfuse”

Above: Here’s what the plug-in looks like when it opens in Lightroom. 4 tabs along the top with different options for merging.

Plugin

Most of the time, I seem to like the results from Enfuse better than Lightroom’s built-in (which I’ve been quite fond of, so that’s saying something), but there were a couple of images I merged where I liked the Lightroom native version better, but not many.

Thomas recommended added +20 Clarity and +10 Contrast two your HDR bracketed images before you Enfuse them, and he’s right — I think it produces a better result.

The only downside I’ve experienced thus far is that it’s quite a bit slower than Lightroom’s Merge to HDR, so you wait longer to see your result, especially with larger brackets of 5 or 7 images. Outside of that, it’s a peach.

Here’s a link to download Enfuse from the developer (be generous). 🙂

Hope you found that helpful.

One more thing…
In other news: Registration for the Photoshop World Orlando 2017 Conference officially opens today. You can read more about it on my blog at scottkelby.com or go to photoshopworld.com

I look forward to meeting a bunch of you here today! 🙂

Best,

-Scott

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