Batch export HDR photos via Web Sharp Pro’s Lightroom integration
Quick note- I have 2 HDR sessions (and a third on advanced masking) at the Lightroom Virtual Summit this week. You can stream for free, or if you use my affiliate link can get the RAW files from my HDR sessions, recordings from all sessions (including 17 other great instructors), notes, and other exclusive bonuses as part of the VIP Pass.
Web Sharp Pro (WSP) supports numerous workflows for creating stunning HDR photos for Instagram, Threads, or your website. And with the power of its integration with LR (Lightroom Classic or Cloud) and CO (Capture One), you can now easily export any of your images for all these uses with the click of just a couple buttons. You could export SDR or HDR with any customizations you like for sharpening/borders/watermarks/etc with perfect sizing and optimization for social media or your own custom specifications. The possibilities are endless and this integration makes it easy to achieve right from your preferred image organizer.
Once set up, the workflow in Lightroom Classic is simply (see below for Lighroom Cloud):
- Export your images from LR / CO to Photoshop (PS) via template as noted below.
- WSP will open a dialog where you simply confirm the settings you wish to use to finish the export
That’s it, it only takes a couple clicks once you’ve set up the export template and settings in Web Sharp Pro.
Your LR / CO export template should include the following:
- export to the location where you want WSP to save the final images (it will always act as if you choose “save to source folder”, as this allows you to control the export location from LR / CO)
- Set the new files to have “-wspBatchAndDelete” added to the file name (this tells WSP to process the images and then delete these temporary files when done). You must include this in the name exactly, so it’s best to copy and paste.
- choose 16-bit TIF with a wide gamut space like P3 (WSP will convert the final image to your preferred colorspace).
- If you wish to support HDR images from LR, select “HDR output” (keeping bit-depth as 16).
- If you keep metadata, WSP can keep it or remove it per your preferences in WSP
- Choose to have the exported images opened in Photoshop (WSP will begin processing images when they open in PS and include the special naming).
You do not need to work with HDR to use these exports, but the settings above will support it. The images will open as 16-bit SDR or 16-bit HDR. If you send SDR and have enabled “enhance SDR to HDR”, WSP will create it for you. If you send just the HDR, WSP will help you create the base SDR image for any gain map (or if you request SDR output, such as for Facebook). And if you send both, WSP will combine them create a custom gain map – this offers maximum artistic control and can easily be done in LrC by creating a virtual copy of your HDR and editing it for SDR.
Note that if you use that 3rd workflow (SDR + HDR) in a layered source file, you should instead export from LR using “original” as this will preserve your layers. This can be a nice way to manage everything in a single file. However, TIF is otherwise ideal for exporting anything direct from RAW images (as using “original” will invoke ACR when you export to PS).
Click the “Tutorials” button in WSP for more information on the integration.
You do not have to do any setup if WSP if you just wish to export with the current settings. However, you may use the save/load settings to create multiple options for batch exports. For example, you could create a template which exports HDR photos with a border for Instagram and separately creates simple SDR photos for Facebook (which does not yet support HDR) and export both at the same time. The possibilities are limited only by your creativity.
The basic steps to create saved settings to use in WSP during bulk export from LR / CO are:
- Set the settings you’d like to use in WSP
- Under “Settings”, click “Save / Load Settings” to open a dialog where you can save the current settings as a new preset.
- Check the categories you wish to save in your preset (anything you leave unchecked will default to the current settings in WSP at the time you use that preset – ie, these are like overrides).
- Give it a name and click the option to save.
- Repeat for as many presets as you’d like to create. Everything you create will be shown as a potential option when you export via the LR / CO
Click the “Tutorials” button in WSP for more information on how to use “save/load settings” to create your own export presets.
If you use Lightroom (cloud version, not Classic):
The cloud version of LR does not support virtual copies nor the ability to export a copy of the original without flattening it. That means you will still be able to send over SDR-only (use WSP’s “enhance SDR to HDR”) or HDR-only (WSP will help you tone map the SDR version), but you will need a different approach to send over both for the same image. I would generally recommend LR cloud users just send over the HDR version. Lightroom Classic is in many ways a much more powerful program, and the limitations here are an example of that.
If you want to create a permanent SDR + HDR edit and use Lightroom cloud, use this approach to prepare your images:
- Open your HDR image to edit in Photoshop as a Smart Object. You will save it as a 32-bit layered TIF / PSB file where the layers include both the SDR and HDR version).
- Create an SDR edit (right-click the Smart Object and choose “new object via copy”, then double-click it, turn off HDR mode in that copy and edit as desired).
- Move the SDR layer to the bottom of the layer stack and rename it so that it includes “SDR” in the name.
- If you wish to use layers for your SDR edit, you can make a group named “SDR” at make sure it is the last top-level layer in the layers panel (move all SDR content into that group).
When WSP sees a 32-bit image, it treats the image as edited as the HDR version and will use the bottom layer named “SDR” as the SDR version. This is workflow #3 as described further under the “tutorials” button in WSP.
Once you have created your layered SDR + HDR images, you can export in bulk using a different approach. You cannot make duplicate originals with layers, so you will not use the automation shown above for LR Classic. Instead, use the following workflow:
- select all your layered images in LR.
- right click and choose Edit in Photoshop / Edit in Photoshop. That will send the layered images over. This won’t be a temporary copy or renamed, these are your working files. So you won’t see the automatic popup from WSP.
- Just click “Batch” to export the opened images.
- Close the images manually.