James Paterson shares his professional advice for fixing lens issues and perspective problems
1. Where to start
The Lens Correction Panel in Lightroomâs Develop Module is the place to apply automatic and manual fixes for inherent problems present, to some extent, in every lens. By contrast, to fix perspective problems like keystoning, use the Transform Panel.
2. Make use of lens profiles
Found in the Lens Correction Panel, this simple checkbox is one of the most important tools for lens fixes. It automatically detects the lens used to take the photo and applies a lens profile to fix any barrel distortion and vignetting that is characteristic of that particular model.
3. Create your own lens profiles
If youâre not satisfied with the lens profiles Lightroom uses, or if your lens isnât listed, one option is to create your own custom profiles. Adobe offers free profile creation software (go to helpx.adobe.com and search for â?lens profile creatorâ). The process is fairly involved, but youâll find help and support on the Adobe site.
4. Manually fix distortion
If the lens you used is not automatically detected, then you may be able to find it manually in the long list of brands and models in the Lens Profile settings. The newer your lens, the more likely it will be recognised. However, if itâs not listed at all then you can go to the Manual tab and adjust the Distortion and Vignetting controls there to get perfect results.
5. Corrections and JPEGs
Lens corrections are best applied to raws as the metadata is used to determine the best fix. As for JPEGs, you can manually choose a lens profile but be aware that Lightroom wonât be able to account for any previous crops or processing applied to the JPEG, so the fix may not be accurate.
6. Use plug-ins
There are plenty of excellent options for lens correction outside Lightroom. DxO PhotoLab 2 is superb â it applies automatic fixes to every image based on DxOâs unparalleled database of lens issues. You can round-trip raws between Lightroom and PhotoLab 2 using File>Plug-in extras.
7. Turn on and size the grid
When manually correcting a lens, a grid can be helpful. Press Cmd/Ctrl+Alt+O to view the grid. Then hold Cmd/Ctrl to alter the size and opacity. You can tailor it to the natural lines in your image then use the manual lens correction sliders to fix.
8. Remove colour fringing
Colour fringing can occur when pixels become misaligned. Itâs more prone to happen along high-contrast edges and with wideangle lenses, especially wideangle zooms. To fix fringing issues automatically, check â?Remove Chromatic Aberrationâ.
9. Use the Defringe sampler
If fringing is still present after checking â?Remove Chromatic Aberrationâ then click the Manual tab in the Lens Correction panel. Either use the Defringe sliders, or grab the eyedropper tool alongside then zoom in and click on a fringe colour to remove it.
10. Apply corrections by default
Some photographers prefer to apply lens fixes automatically to every image that is imported into Lightroom. This is easy to set up. Simply, check â?Enable Profile Correctionsâ and â?Remove Chromatic Aberrationâ then go to Develop>Set Default Settings>Update to Current Settings (note this also changes the defaults in Adobe Camera Raw).
11. The Upright controls
This powerful command automatically corrects for unwanted perspective problems â most notably distracting converging verticals, keystoning and wonky horizons. Simply go to the Transform panel in the Lightroom Develop Module and click through the buttons to apply the right automatic fix for your photograph.
12. Which Upright button?
There are four automatic Upright fixes to choose from in the Transform panel. â?Autoâ applies level, aspect ratio and perspective correction. Level weighs corrections towards horizontal details, and Vertical puts the bias on vertical details. Full combines all the other three into one.
13. Apply fixes first
The Upright controls are best applied to raw files, as Lightroom uses the extra metadata â such as the focal length â to aid it in fixing the perspective. Before applying any Upright fix itâs best to â?Enable Profile Correctionsâ and â?Remove Chromatic Aberrationâ first in the Lens Correction panel (if you forget and do this afterwards, hit â?Updateâ in the Upright settings).
14. Adjust the Aspect Ratio
The Full option applies a full 3D correction to your photo, snapping all lines in the image to vertical or horizontal. This can lead to extreme distortion with your image looking squashed or stretched. If this happens, try fine-tuning the Aspect slider in the Transform panel until things look more natural.
15. Batch-apply Upright settings
There are two ways to apply Upright to an entire set. To begin, correct one image then select the others and hit the Sync button. Youâll see two options â?Upright Modeâ and â?Upright Transformsâ. Mode analyses and fixes each image as an individual, and Transforms applies the exact adjustment to all â this is the better option for batch-processing photos that need identical tweaks, like a timelapse.
16. Preserve your settings
When you apply any automatic Upright correction like Auto, Level or Full the command will by default cancel any previous manual-perspective corrections youâve made. However, if you want to preserve the settings then hold Alt as you press the Upright buttons.
17. Guided Upright controls
This gives you a degree of manual control over perspective corrections, and itâs helpful when the auto Upright buttons fail. We simply grab the Guided Upright tool from the Transform panel then drag guide lines through the image to correct horizontals and verticals.