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How To Create A Diptych In Lightroom

How to make diptychs and triptychs in Lightroom. A tutorial by Irvin Lin of Eat the Love. www.eatthelove.com

Last week I gave a tutorial on adding type and watermarks to photos in Lightroom. But did you know that you could also make diptychs, triptychs and collages in Lightroom? The method is not the most obvious, as it's more geared toward creating printed pictures but you CAN do it, which gives you more creative ways to display images on the web. Plus it saves you from leaving Lightroom and opening up another program (or using a website like PicMonkey) to create collaged images. The process isn't difficult but it might seem a bit confusing at first. However, once you set it up, I'll also show you have to save your settings so you can just pull the template up and make the diptych without having to start from scratch all over again every time.

To create a diptych, the first thing you need is edit the photos you want to use in the diptych. Process them like you would any other photos using the Develop module (adjusting exposure, cropping, contrast and whatever else you need to do to make your photo pretty). Then go up to right top corner and click on the Print module.

First process your image in the develop module of Lightroom. A tutorial by Irvin Lin of Eat the Love. www.eatthelove.com

Now select the Print module at the top. Tutorial by Irvin Lin of Eat the Love. www.eatthelove.com

On the right column, at the top, make sure the Layout Style is pulled down (the triangle next to the words Layout Style is pointing down) and select Custom Package. Right underneath is the Image Setting section; make sure none of the selections are checked.

Make sure you can see the Layout Style and select Custom Package. Tutorial by Irvin Lin of Eat the Love. www.eatthelove.com

Make sure nothing is checked. Tutorial by Irvin Lin of Eat the Love. www.eatthelove.com

Underneath the Image Setting is the Rulers, Grid & Guides section. Pull down the Ruler Units and select Points (which, for our current purposes, is the same as pixels). Go ahead and select Off for the Grid Snap as well. You can pick whatever you want for the Show Guides, but usually I have the Rulers selected and that's it.

Select Points and Grid Snap Off for the Rules, Grids and Guides section. Tutorial by Irvin Lin of Eat the Love. www.eatthelove.com

Skip down to the bottom Print Job section next (the last option at the bottom). The first option in that section is for Print to. Use the pull down menu and select JPEG file. Make sure your Draft Mode Printing is not selected and your File Resolution is 72 ppi (the default with usually be 300 because this module is set up for print not web. To change it, just click on the 300 and a box will appear that will let you change the ppi to 72). I don't bother with adding Print Sharpening so you can leave that selection off as well. Select the JPEG quality you want (I usually go with around 67, keeping in mind the larger the number the larger the file size will be but the better the image will look).

Select Print to JPEG File. Tutorial by Irvin Lin of Eat the Love. www.eatthelove.com

Change the resolution to 72 ppi. Tutorial by Irvin Lin of Eat the Love. www.eatthelove.com

Now the Custom File Dimensions is a bit tricky. You DEFINITELY need to check this on (otherwise it will default to whatever your printer page set up size is, usually 8.5 x 11 in which you don't want). You need to know the EXACT size that you want the final diptych to be. If you shoot with a dSLR camera, most likely your images are 4 x 6 in proportion. If your photos are 600 pixels wide for your blog you can set your custom dimension to 600 pt to 447 pt. This will give you two photos that are 298 pixels wide by 447 pixels tall, with a 4 pixel gap between them. Now if you've shot with an iPhone or another camera with a different proportion (a lot of point and shoot cameras shoot as a different aspect ratio) or you've cropped your photo into an oddball shape you'll have adjust the custom file dimension to fit the size of two side by side images with a little bit of gap between them. You can totally create an algebraic ratio equation to figure this out using the size of the original photos that you have, but since I haven't taken a math class in about 20+ years, I am SO not the person figure out what that equation is. Instead, go to one of your old diptych photos that you created in photoshop, gimp or picmonkey and look at the pixel dimensions of that photo, then just use those dimensions.

Make sure to select Custom File Dimensions and add the appropriate dimensions you want. Tutorial by Irvin Lin of Eat the Love. www.eatthelove.com

Under that is Color Management. Make sure your profile is sRGB (the main color profile that is used on the web) and pick Relative for Intent. If you want to learn more about color management for the web you can visit this page on color space and color profiles but it'll probably give you a headache to read it so I'd advise against it. Make sure the Print Adjustment is not checked (remember this module is mostly for print, not for web, that's why there are these options that you don't need).

Select sRGB and Intent Relative under Color Management. Tutorial by Irvin Lin of Eat the Love. www.eatthelove.com

Now go back up to the Cells section (right under the Rulers, Grids & Guides). Under the Add to Package is a bunch of options. Pick the top left one and select any of the options (you'll be changing it anyway, so it doesn't matter which one you pick). You'll notice a box pop up on the white blank page with a blue outline. Underneath the Add to Package are a couple of sliders for Adjust Select Cell. Pull the Height slider all the way to the right (447 pt). Pull the Width one to 298 pt. You'll notice as you pull the sliders to the size you want, the blue square will also shift in size.

Add a box by pulling down the add to package and selecting one image. Doesn't matter what size as you'll change it. Tutorial by Irvin Lin of Eat the Love. www.eatthelove.com
Doesn't matter what size you choose as you'll change it. Tutorial by Irvin Lin of Eat the Love. www.eatthelove.com

Notice a blue box pops up on the white page. Tutorial by Irvin Lin of Eat the Love. www.eatthelove.com

Change the cell size to the appropriate dimensions. Tutorial by Irvin Lin of Eat the Love. www.eatthelove.com

Notice how the blue box expanded to the right size. Tutorial by Irvin Lin of Eat the Love. www.eatthelove.com

Go back and repeat what you just did again, pulling down on the top left pull down menu under Add to Package and select another size (again it doesn't matter what size). You'll notice another box pops up. Adjust Select Cell to Height: 447 pt and Width: 298 pt just like last time. You should now have two boxes butting up next to each other. Go up to the right box, click in the center of it, so it has a blue outline, and then just click and drag on the box to the right, so you have a gap between the boxes .

Add to package adds another box. Tutorial by Irvin Lin of Eat the Love. www.eatthelove.com

Once you've adjusted the cell size the box will be the right size but not the right place. Tutorial by Irvin Lin of Eat the Love. www.eatthelove.com

Click and drag the right box over to the right side of the page to create a gap between the boxes. Tutorial by Irvin Lin of Eat the Love. www.eatthelove.com

Now go down below to the strip of photos and drag and drop the photos you want into each box. The box should highlight yellow as you drag the photo thumbnail on top of the box. Just let go and the box should have the image you want in it. If you don't like that image or you change your mind, just drag a different image on top of that image. It should change like magic!

Drag the image you want into the box on the page. Tutorial by Irvin Lin of Eat the Love. www.eatthelove.com

Add the second image to the second box and you have your diptych! Tutorial by Irvin Lin of Eat the Love. www.eatthelove.com

If you want to create a triptych image, the method is pretty much the same. Just figure out what the final image size will be first, and then add the boxes. You can arrange the boxes around by clicking and dragging them to the location on the page. You can even adjust the size of them by dragging the sides of the blue boxes (but it's not as accurate as the sliders).

To create a triptych, the method is pretty similar, just add one more image cell to the package. Tutorial by Irvin Lin of Eat the Love. www.eatthelove.com

At this point you're pretty much done, but if you want to get all fancy and add a watermark (like I taught you in my previous How to Add Type to a Photo using Lightroom tutorial) you can click the Watermark button under thePage section. Keep in that any type or graphic image you put on the photos will appear on ALL images at the same location on each photo. Once you've got your photo set, click the Print to File… button at the bottom right and save the image with whatever title you want (remember to add the .jpg to the end of the file name as well).

Add a watermark if you want, to each image. Tutorial by Irvin Lin of Eat the Love. www.eatthelove.com

The watermark will go on each image at the same place. Tutorial by Irvin Lin of Eat the Love. www.eatthelove.com

Click the Print to File... button and save the image with whatever file name you choose. Tutorial by Irvin Lin of Eat the Love. www.eatthelove.com

Now once you've set this up once, you can save diptych template under User Templates. Go to the left side panel under the preview and click the + button next to Template Browser. Name the template whatever you want and the next time you want to create a diptych, you can just click on that template under User Templates and a blank template will pop up that allows you to drag and drop whatever images you want on to there. Now you're ready to create all the diptychs and triptychs you want for your blog easy breezy right. Go to it!

Make sure to save your template so it's easy to create a new collage next time! Tutorial by Irvin Lin of Eat the Love. www.eatthelove.com

How To Create A Diptych In Lightroom

Source: https://www.eatthelove.com/collages-lightroom/

Posted by: blancharddeve1941.blogspot.com

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