Lightroom Presets Pack for Explorers

Get a quick finish for your favourite shots with Kendall Plant’s Explorer Pack presets. Create dramatic but natural-looking landscapes with boosted blues and greens, warm shadows and creamy highlights.

The three Adobe Lightroom presets in this pack are inspired by some of his favorite places in the world. Use them to create dramatic but natural-looking landscapes, give images a soft film-inspired tone, or add a moody black and white look to photos.

Make sure to check out the tips at the bottom of this page to learn how to apply and customize the presets to fit your shooting style.

Lone Pine

Lone Pine is a crisp preset that boosts blues and greens in landscape images, and adds contrast to scenes while preserving details in the shadows. This is my go-to preset for a variety of landscapes, but can also be used for portraits with a few adjustments to oranges and red tones.


Tokyo

Inspired by the soft tones of the neighborhood in Tokyo, this preset adds creamy highlights and warm shadows for a muted, film-inspired look. I use this preset on a variety of images, including portraits, street photography, and interior scenes.


Berkeley

It’s a moody black and white preset, with a touch of grain and a lower white point. This preset works well on a wide range of photos, and you can easily customize it for a less faded look.


Customize Your Look

One-click filters are fun, but I rarely apply a preset to a photo without making at least a couple adjustments. Every photo and scene is different, and each photographer has their own individual shooting style.

After applying an Explorer Pack preset, spend some time playing with the editing tools in Lightroom to adjust settings as needed and create your own look. Are there areas of your photo that are looking too dark? Increase the Shadows slider. Not partial to muted highlights? Open up the Tone Curve and bring up the white point.

There are three settings that the Explorer Pack presets does not change, which will depend on your device, lens, shooting conditions, and personal style:

1. Exposure: How light or dark your image is. Increase exposure to brighten a photo, or decrease it to darken it.

2. White Balance: The temperature and tint of the tones in your image. Increase the temperature for warmer photo, or decrease it for cooler tones.

3. Lens Corrections: Check “Enable Lens Corrections” to allow Lightroom to detect the device and lens you’re shooting with and remove distortions and vignetting.


4 Comments Add yours

  1. I think the Tokyo presets will work well for the downtown store fronts of Princeton, New Jersey.

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    1. Lina Sariff says:

      I think so too. 🤗🤗

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  2. I wanted to purchase the mobile version of these presets but it seems I can’t do it from the USA. 😔

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