Hold the Option key on Mac (the Alt key on a Windows PC) and you’ll notice that the Reset button changes into the ‘Set Default’ button, shown circled above in red. STEP THREE: Go to the bottom of the Right Side panels. You can see it applied the profile correction for my 24-240mm lens. STEP TWO: Go to the Lens Correction panel and turn on the checkbox to ‘Enable Profile Corrections’ and turn on the ‘Remove Chromatic Aberration’ checkbox, as well (as shown here). Make sure all your sliders are set to their default positions (in other words, don’t make any changes or edits to the RAW file you opened). STEP ONE: Open a RAW photo using the camera and lens you want to have Lightroom auto-correct (in my case, it’s a Canon EOS R mirrorless with Canon’s new RF-mount 24-240mm f/4-f/6.3 lens). This is a follow-up to Friday’s post about my new Canon lens that most definitely needs to have Lightroom’s Lens Corrections applied each and every single time, or it makes the lens just about unusable (well, without Lightroom or Photoshop or even Canon’s own DPP software fixing the Lens issues).Īnyway, here’s how to set up Lightroom so it will automatically, by default, apply the proper lens profile and chromatic aberration fixes when you use a particular camera body.
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