So, here’s the scenario: you want to try something artistic with your white balance for a particular images, but you’re not sure which white balance setting you might like best. This is where Virtual Copies (and another great Lightroom feature you’ll walk about in just a sec) come in really handy.
First, if you’re not familiar with Virtual copies, here’s a quick glimpse at what they are. If you were to open a megabyte image in Photoshop and you want to compare that image with another copy of it, you would have to duplicate that image, which would mean you now have another 42-megabyte photo on your computer. You’ve literally doubled your file size just to see a second version of your image. In Lightroom, when you create a Virtual copy it doesn’t duplicate the file. It essentials duplicates the thumbnail, so it barely takes up any space at all, so you can make many copies and compare them without really taking up any extra space. It’s why they’re called “virtual copies” — it doesn’t make a real copy. This will make more sense in just a moment. Follow along below:
STEP ONE: Here’s our original image with our As Shot white balance. To make a virtual copy, you simply right-click on the image (if you’re on a Mac and don’t have a 2nd mouse button, just Ctrl-click on it) and a menu appears (seen above). Choose ‘Create Virtual Copy’ as shown here.
When you do this, if you look at your thumbnails in the Library grid view (or down in the Filmstrip) it creates a thumbnail just to the right of the original and it looks exactly like another copy of your image file, but remember — it’s not — it’s just a virtual copy, for its perfect for experimenting with things like White Balance.
STEP TWO: Since this is a virtual copy, let’s experiment and choose a different white balance by dragging the Temperature and Tint Sliders. Since we’re doing this on a Virtual Copy, it doesn’t affect our original at all. We’re just experimenting — our original is untouched.
STEP THREE: Let’s do it again. Let’s make another Virtual copy and try a different white balance. You don’t have to do that right-click pop-up menu thing. If you want an even faster way, there’s a keyboard shortcut. It’s Command-‘ on Mac or Ctri-‘ on a Windows PC). Once your new virtual copy appears, in the Develop Module drag the White Balance temperature and Tint sliders around to come up with another white balance look for your image.
STEP FOUR: You can repeat this process of making virtual copies and tweaking the white balance as many times as you. Since these are all virtual it doesn’t add any drive space or overhead to Lightroom. This is unlimited experimenting time.
STEP FIVE: Once you’ve got a bunch of ’em — all with different White Balance here’s the fun part: Select them all, then press the letter ‘n’ on you keyboard to enter Lightroom’s Survey Mode, which arranges all your selected images on screen so you can see all the different looks, and find the one (or more) you like best.
STEP SIX: Once you know which one you like, you can . leave Survey mode by pressing ‘n’ again and when it returns you to the Grid View. Now, if you like, you can mark your favorite image as a 5-star, or give it a color label, a pick flag — sometime to mark it as your white balance choice. Now you can get rid of the other Virtual Copies if you want. Note: you can see which ones are virtual copies by looking in the bottom left corner of the thumbnail. If you see a turned-up page corner (I circled it above in red), it’s a virtual copy. Just click on any one you want to delete, and press the Delete or Backspace key to remove its thumbnail, and now it’s like those never happened.
But what about that Virtual Copy — it’s not real, right?
What if you want to print that one you liked or export it outside of Lightroom? How do you make it into a real file? Well, here’s the good news — you don’t have to do anything. Lightroom treats it like it’s a real file, and when you want to export it from Lightroom using the Export feature (maybe you want to upload it to your portfolio or to Instagram or Facebook), it automatically calls on the original file to create a real image for you, so it looks and acts like the real thing all the way until the end. This is just another reason I love virtual copies (and survey mode, too!).
Hope you give this a try on your own images.
In other news…
I was very psyched to see my new ‘Natural Light Portrait Book’ made fstoppers.com top-10 picks for 2019 Educational Photography Books.
I was very psyched to see my new ‘Natural Light Portrait Book’ made fstoppers.com top-10 picks for 2019 Educational Photography Books. Here’s the article (honored to be in the company of some really great authors and titles).
It’s in-stock at Amazon right now (Prime shipping, too) if you want to grab the printed version before Christmas I’d go order your copy right now. Of course, it’s available as an ebook for Kindle and the Nook, too!
Have a great Holiday weekend everybody. Stay warm, and happy shopping!
-Scott
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