To understand how a Texture might fit your work in progress, you can now visually browse Textures just as you do with Sky AI and Augmented Sky AI tools. Textures have already been a part of Luminar AI, but Skylum has pimped up this feature a bit. Using sliders, you can adjust the background exposure, add glow to highlights, set a specific depth of field, and refine edges. ![]() In addition to adjustable bokeh, you can further refine the background. While the bokeh is automatically generated, once again, you can control its strength with a slider. The mask is generated automatically, but you can still refine and customize the mask to add or subtract focus to a photo. Intelligent mask creation: as I mentioned, the tool recognizes people and creates a mask to separate them from the background.Sounds like a useful tool for smartphone shots, especially if your phone’s portrait mode sucks. Once it isolates the subject from the background, this tool emulates the background bokeh we get with a wide-open aperture. Skylum claims that it even recognizes people in groups or in unusual positions or poses. ![]() ![]() Portrait Bokeh AI isolates the subject of a portrait from the background. Okay, so let’s start with the latest addition to Luminar AI’s family of automated editing tools.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |