Lumenzia v12 adds Focus Stacking and ability to auto-align Smart Objects
I’ve got a great tutorial for you below on Lumenzia v12 – but first, want to share a couple time-sensitive announcements:
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Lumenzia v12
I am excited to announce the official launch of Lumenzia v12. The headline features in the initial release are a unique ability to align smart objects and new non-destructive focus stacking workflows (see the release notes for a full listing of recent updates).
In recent years, I’ve been trying to get you new features early rather than hold things back for a bigger release. But after hundreds of updates in the v11 life cycle and with major updates today, I think it’s past due to acknowledge how much Lumenzia has improved – so this is the official start of the v12 updates.
Lumenzia v12 is now available as another free update for all customers (see the update page to download and install page for more info). If you purchased Lumenzia when it launched over a decade ago, you’ve now received thousands of improvements with that single purchase at no additional cost..
Align smart objects
The most significant update in v12.0 is a new ability to align smart objects. This unlocks the ability to use the most powerful non-destructive tools (RAW smart object editing) while aligning images that were hand held, shot on a tripod which got bumped or moved, or when focus stacking (to correct focus breathing). None of this removes the need to shoot and compose your images carefully, but it offers much more flexibility for non-destructive workflows.
Note that there is no change in the user interface – the existing PreBlend “align” feature now simply works even when your source is a smart object. But under the hood is literally years of work to perfect the code to make this technically feasible – even Photoshop does not offer alignment of smart objects.
Focus Stacking
The most exciting use for this may actually be focus stacking, which is now a new tab in Lumenzia’s “PreBlend”. Focus stacking always requires alignment due to focus breathing (changes in field of view as you change the focus distance). In the past, focus stacking meant you always had a destructive workflow, as you could not make any changes to your RAW processing after stacking. That is no longer the case. You can now tweak your RAW processing after stacking, which is especially ideal if you wish to exposure blend or otherwise improve the sky in your focus stack.
The Focus Stacking options under “PreBlend” include:
- Sort by layer name or inferred focus distance. This helps easily organize the layers from near to far focus distance.
- Lock layers to help avoid accidentally altering source pixels when painting on masks. However, if you prefer not to use the “RAW” button in the Basics panel to edit smart objects, you might prefer to leave the layers unlocked.
- Match color to active layer. This helps manage minor shifts in brightness or color which may be common when shooting at stack in fast changing light at sunrise or sunset. This feature is not available when working with Smart Objects (though you can easily tweak exposure and white balance in those RAW objects to match).
- Crop transparent edges eliminates gaps at edges which occur when correcting for focus breathing. You may wish to leave this off if you prefer to use content-aware fill instead of cropping.
For those of you already familiar with focus stacking, you know that it often requires some degree of manual refinement to pick the sharpest frames across all parts of the image. And because refining the original masks can get tedious (as you’d have to delete parts of masks on upper layers as you reveal lower ones), it often involves doubling the number of layers. The correction process can therefore get tedious as you search for the right layer to use for correction. Lumenzia’s approach simplifies this by offering novel ways to make corrections.
Here’s the workflow to refine the focus masks:
- Activate the move tool (<V>) and right-click on sharp pixels next to the ones you need to repair, and click the layer name that appears. This identifies / selects the sharp layer and Lumenzia will automatically make the correct layer mask active and switch to the paint brush for you.
- Paint white on the layer mask to reveal the sharp pixels.
- Repeat the process as needed until your blending is complete.
Here’s the workflow to refine RAW processing:
- Select the layer (the thumbnail, not the mask) you wish to edit and click the “RAW” button in Lumenzia Basics. This will let you edit the RAW settings without needing to unlock the layer. Because Lumenzia creates the correction layers as dependent smart objects, you’ll be editing both the source and correction layer at the same time, while also avoiding file size increases which would occur with independent smart objects.
- If you need to copy adjustments from one RAW layer to another:
- Click <ctrl/cmd>-C to copy all settings while editing the source layer, then close it, open the target, and <ctrl/cmd>-V to paste.
- If you wish to only copy certain settings: use <alt/option><ctrl/cmd>-C when copying
- (or use the … menu if you don’t remember the shortcuts).
Note that while you are viewing an image that was focus stacked by Lumenzia AND have the move tool active, any attempt to select one of the original lower layers will cause the correction layer mask to become active and the lower group to close. This is how Lumenzia helps you use the move tool to pick images, but it cannot discriminate between using the move tool and directly clicking the layer. If you wish to select one of the lower layers, simply switch to any tool other than the move tool. It is unlikely you would ever need to access the lower layer, as you’ll do mask refinements on the upper layers and any RAW edit on them will also update the lower layers automatically. It is generally best to leave the lower layers alone. You could merge the whole group if you wish, but this will end your ability to make further RAW changes.






