Adobe Photoshop Lightroom v13.1.0 Crack (x64) + Fix Free Download
Adobe Photoshop Lightroom v13.1.0 Crack for photo editing expert manner and schedule Bridge to manage and organize images form a comprehensive offer, but the software Adobe Photoshop Lightroom both management and image editing as necessary and desirable for photographers and designers in an environment that provides Is.
It’s non-destructive editing is done in the form of Non-Destructive or the original file remains unchanged. The basic idea of the software produced by Adobe in 2002, was one of the developers and, gradually completed and ImageReady software features also be included.
Features :
- The interface is very attractive and friendly
- View, manage and organize images in a graphical environment and beautiful
- Perform a variety of editing actions to improve the color, brightness, contrast, noise, size and Pictures
- Editing a variety of video formats commonly used as a nondestructive and without altering the original file
- Ability to print images at full settings
- Ability to create image gallery and use it on the web
- Advanced search and detailed images
- View images as a slideshow with support for video files
- Coordination and integration with Photoshop
How To Install?
- Install the program from the given setup.
- Run the application and create a fake account in it.
- Click on 7 day trial and start your trial.
- Extract the “Crack Fix.zip” to directory where you’ve installed the program. Replace all the files
- Boom! Now you can use the program without any interruptions.
- That’s it, Enjoy now
How to Crack and Install?
- Download Adobe Photoshop Lightroom v13.1.0 Crack
- Now install it on your program.
- After installation is complete, copy and paste the crack file
- Then paste it in an installation directory
- Done
- Enjoy full version
Adobe Photoshop Lightroom v13.1.0 Crack Requirements
- 2 GHz Processor
- 2GB of RAM
- HDD space 800MB
- 670-MB installation space required
- Windows XP, 7, 8, 8.1, and also 10
- MAC OS X 10.8 or later.
PROS
- Excellent photo management and organization
- Camera and lens-based corrections
- Brush and gradient adjustments with color and luminance masking
- Face detection and tagging
- Plug-in support
- Connected mobile apps
CONS
- Initial raw conversion is slightly more detailed in some competing products
- Requires subscription
Face Detection
Like its enthusiast-level sibling, Adobe Photoshop Lightroom v13.1.0 Crack Elements, Lightroom Classic offers face detection and recognition. You can get started with the feature either by clicking on the software nameplate at top left and choosing Face Detection from the dropdown, or you can click on the face icon in the toolbar in Library mode to enter People view.
That’s a little more hidden than I’d like. There’s no entry in the left pane with Collections and Catalog, and a Faces mode view would be nice, to go along with the Map mode.
You can start finding faces in your entire catalog or to only find faces on an as-needed basis.
To test this, I chose the first option, and the program began detecting faces right away. It built a grid of unnamed people, stacking those that it detected as being close enough to be considered one and the same person. It’s interesting how a person in the same session but with a different expression sometimes isn’t included in his or her stack.
Once it’s done detecting, you type a name into the box with a question mark below the photo or stack, and it pops right up into the Named People section. Once you name a few, Lightroom Classic proposes names for unnamed face shots.
You select the check mark if it’s correct. It’s one of the smoothest and simplest implementations of people tagging I’ve seen. Adobe has clearly studied how other apps do this and come upon a great interface and process.
In another test, it claimed several nonhuman images—patterns in shrubbery—had faces. If you only have a couple named faces, it can match some wildly off other faces for the name, so a bit of training is required. It also has trouble with profiles and faces partially hidden by hats and other clothing, and as you’d expect, paintings, statues, and Memoji are detected as faces.
Once faces are tagged, you can always get to them by tapping the same face icon in Library mode, but I wish you could also easily create smart albums based on peoples’ names or even use a People mode as you can use Map mode. Face detection might seem like a consumer feature, but pros who shoot events with lots of faces could certainly make good use of it.
Raw Profiles
Adobe Photoshop Lightroom v13.1.0 Mod Apk users probably know that working with raw camera files offers the most leeway when you’re correcting images. It lets you change the image’s white balance after the fact and enables you to bring out more detail in over and underexposed areas. Lightroom Classic translates raw data from the camera sensor into a viewable image, using a rendering Profile.
Profiles are grouped into two basic categories: raw and creative. The first group includes Adobe Raw and Camera Matching Profiles, while Creative options include Legacy, Artistic, B&W, Modern, and Vintage. The raw Profiles only work with raw images, while the last four are special effects that also work with JPG images.
The Adobe Raw group includes Adobe Color, Monochrome, Landscape, Neutral, Portrait, Standard, and Vivid. Adobe Color is the default for newly imported photos.
It gets a bit more contrast, warmth, and vividness out of the photo than Adobe Standard, which is the same as the previous version of Lightroom. You can thankfully now turn on lens-profile corrections for everything you import, rather than making you go down and turn them on for every photo after importing.
For several of my test shots, particularly of color portraits and landscapes, I now find Lightroom Classic’s initial rendering as satisfactory as Capture One’s, though I prefer the less juiced-up Portrait profile for many photos rather than the default Color profile, which I find oversaturated.
Any photos you’ve already imported will retain the legacy Adobe Standard Profile, so you may want to go back and switch that to Adobe Color or one of the others if you’re working on an older shot.
Camera Matching Profiles are based on your camera manufacturer’s image rendering. As you might surmise, they’re designed to match what you see on your camera LCD or the JPG the camera produces. I found them less effective than Adobe’s Profiles. In test portraits shot on a Canon EOS 1Ds some were too cool, and others were oversaturated.
The Monochrome Profile is a better option than starting with a color Profile and then converting to black-and-white. That’s because it starts from the raw camera image. Portrait is supposed to reproduce all skin tones accurately, and Landscape adds a lot more vibrancy, since there are no face tones to worry about distorting. Neutral has the least contrast, useful for difficult lighting situations, and Vivid punches up saturation and contrast.
The Creative Profiles may remind many people of Instagram filters. I’m disappointed that they have names like Artistic 01, Modern 04, and so on. I’d prefer names that give you a sense of what the effect does. Despite that quibble, the Creative Profiles really do add moods, usually without being overdone. In some cases, they produce a one-step improvement. The 17 B&W choices are remarkably varied, too.
Enhance Details and Super Resolution
Another relatively new tool for raw camera files is Enhance Details, which is available in both Lightroom Classic and Adobe Photoshop Lightroom v13.1.0 Mod Apk . The feature is intended to clarify complex parts of an image.
It’s a very subtle effect, and for many photos, it doesn’t do a whole lot, especially for parts of the photo that have a consistent texture, such as the sky. You access the feature from the Photo menu (or from a right-click menu), and then it shows you a dialog with a detailed view of your shot. Running it creates a new DNG file. It’s a very compute-intensive operation, and even crashed my system on one occasion.
For some shots, the difference wasn’t noticeable at all, and on others it was only noticeable at 2:1 magnification. I did see more detail in a shot of wet pavement, and it could certainly make a meaningful difference in a large print. However, it doesn’t feel close to a 30% improvement in detail. In the following shot, the gravel on the right side looks more gravelly:
In the shot below, the medallion shows more detail to my eyes (though not to those of some of my coworkers). Still, I’m not convinced that it has 30% more detail. PCMag’s camera analyst Jim Fisher tried the feature in the macOS version on his 5K iMac and found similarly minimal changes to the images.
A newer, related feature is Super Resolution, which you can apply to the selected photo from the Photo > Enhance menu item or by right-clicking and choosing Enhance. The tool works with JPGs rather than raw files and is intended to improve old, low-megapixel images. In my view, its AI edits give photos an artificial look, though it does smooth out pixelation.
Photo Adjustment
In the Develop mode, sliders for adjustments like Exposure, Contrast, and Blacks all sit right in the middle of their tracks at zero, letting you slide them up and down. Having everything set to a 0 baseline and slider motion up to 100 and down to -100 makes good sense.
It’s possible to adjust multiple photos at once, by selecting them on the filmstrip along the bottom and tapping the Auto Sync button. You can be very specific about which adjustments you want to synchronize. The button always shows when auto-syncing is enabled. A tooltip now displays the number of images the develop settings will be applied to.
Adobe claims that the Auto Settings button, tucked next to the Tone group of controls, has been sped up, but it’s still far from instant. There’s also an Auto button in Library mode’s Quick Develop panel that does the same thing. I’m seldom thrilled with its results, though it is effective on photos with very poor lighting. I find that it often results in overly bright, contrast-y images.
The program’s shadow and highlight recovery tools let you bring out a dark face without blowing out the bright sky in an image, for example.
You can also do this with an adjustment brush, but the effect is more natural when applied with Lightroom Classic’s Highlights and Shadows sliders. Most photo apps these days, however, include shadow adjustment, even the free Microsoft Photos and Apple Photos. A basic behavior of all the lighting sliders is that moving them to the left always darkens the image, to the right brightens. Other programs have less consistent controls.
In addition to the sliders, Lightroom Classic offers a Photoshop-like Tone Curve adjustment tool that was updated in the latest release. You can not only drag sections of the curve up and down to brighten and darken the original values but also use a control directly on the photo to brighten and darken areas with the same brightness value.
You can switch between parametric and point curves. The first option simply divides your image into four ranges—highlights, lights, darks, and shadows—to which the curve edits limit you. The old-school point curve option lets you specify an exact luminosity value and adjust that. Now you can even pin a control point and adjust its value numerically.
Area-specific adjustments are possible with Lightroom Classic’s Adjustment Brush tool. The Adjustment Brush lets you apply white balance, noise reduction, and moiré removal to specific areas of an image. You can also use the Hue slider with local adjustments. It can be very useful for images in which you want different hues for different parts of the photo, such as a face that looks too red.
Conclusion
Adobe Photoshop Lightroom v13.1.0 Crack remains the gold standard in pro photo workflow software. It’s a complete package, with top-notch organization tools, state-of-the-art adjustments, and all the output and printing options you could want.
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