LIGHTROOM FEATURES
Make selective edits with masking tools in Adobe Lightroom.
Discover how to use Lightroom masking features to make local adjustments on specific areas of your photos.
LIGHTROOM FEATURES
Discover how to use Lightroom masking features to make local adjustments on specific areas of your photos.
Masking tools let you apply an adjustment to one specific area of a photo, rather than the entire image. If you want to make the subject of your photo pop by increasing its saturation while leaving the background as is, put a mask over your subject and adjust the saturation on the masked area.
Through machine learning, the Select Subject and Select Sky masks automatically put a mask over the subject or the sky in your photo.
Paint on your mask manually with the Brush tool for more detailed selections.
A gradient mask has an edge that gradually tapers off. A Radial gradient is circular and a Linear gradient cuts straight across.
Mask and make changes to only a certain range of hues.
Target the foreground or background of photos taken in iPhone Portrait Mode or with the Lightroom for mobile Depth Capture feature.
Mask and make changes only to areas with a certain range of luminance or brightness.
Any edits you make to masked areas are non-destructive, meaning you can go back and adjust them later. You can also adjust the shape of your mask and what’s included in it with easy-to-use tools..
Masks show up as a red overlay on your photo when you add them. You can also see a preview of your mask in a small thumbnail in the masking panel. The white area shows where you’re editing.
Add to or subtract from your masked area so you can get your mask just right. Click Add or Subtract on your Masks floating panel. Or combine effects from two existing masks with the Intersect tool.
To affect areas outside of your mask rather than inside, click Invert. Your mask will instantly swap position. For example, choose Select Subject then Invert to edit just the background.
The Brush tool is the best way to make tiny tweaks to your masked area. Click Subtract to use the brush to erase pieces of the mask or Add to use it to expand your masked area.
Follow along to create your first mask and level up your photo editing.
The best way to get comfortable using masks is to play with each of the masking tools. Explore how you might use different masks to emphasise different parts of your images. Make sure your version of Lightroom is up to date and then try these Lightroom tutorials to get started:
MEMBERSHIP PLANS
Start with just Lightroom or get Lightroom and 20+ other apps with the Creative Cloud All Apps plan.
The full version of Lightroom for mobile, desktop and web, plus Lightroom Classic.
Annual, paid monthly
NZ$23.23/mo incl. GST
Lightroom, Lightroom Classic and Photoshop on desktop and iPad.
Annual, paid monthly
NZ$38.76/mo incl. GST
Save 50% for the first 3 months on the full version of Lightroom and more than 20 apps. Pay NZ$56.17/mo for the first 3 months and NZ$112.36/mo after that. New subscribers only. See terms
Annual, paid monthly
NZ$112.36/mo NZ$56.17/mo incl. GST
The full version of Lightroom plus Adobe Express Premium plan and plus more than 20 apps at a special price.
See-terms | Check eligibility
Annual, paid monthly
NZ$112.36/mo NZ$29.10/mo incl. GST
The full version of Lightroom plus the Adobe Express Premium plan, plus exclusive business features.
Annual, paid monthly
NZ$69.69/moper license incl. GST
The full version of Lightroom, the Adobe Express Premium plan and more than 20 creative apps, plus exclusive business features.
Annual, paid monthly
NZ$164.68/moper license incl. GST