Templates is the next step, which replaces the right-hand organization tools with a series of one-shot filters that Luminar 4 called Looks. The edits are stored in a database file, and only permanently applied when you export a new version of the image when you’re happy with your changes. Luminar is a non-destructive image editing app, which means your original files aren’t overwritten as you edit. Once it has imported your images, you can select one for editing, and any new images added to the folder will be imported. The first of these, the + button, allows you to add a folder of images, or a single image, to the app catalog. Menus such as File and Edit are accessed by clicking the Luminar logo in the top left, meaning that all the non-editing interface really consists of are the workflow buttons along the top. You get a zoom percentage, a question mark button that opens a browser window and takes you to Luminar’s video tutorial and, right in the bottom right corner, a clock face that opens a History palette, allowing you to step back through the edits you made to the current image. Otherwise, the new interface is a simpler one than before. Skylum still hasn’t been able to implement a horizontal division, however. The Eye button, that just shows you the original while you hold it down, is still there too. The buttons that open a side-by-side view, with a movable before-and-after vertical terminator that can be dragged from side to side to show the original image on one side and the edited version on the other. The best of Luminar 4’s interface persists, however.
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