Copy link to clipboard
Copied
This thread is now closed. Please update to LrC 14.x or LrD 8.x. If you wish to provide feedback, please go to the new article.
The recommended order for applying edits is:
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
@phfsly: "discovered very very light shadow"
I've encountered several situations with reflections and shadows that I just didn't notice the first several attempts, despite me being quite aware of the issue. Generative Remove is certainly determined to use all the info in the photo to generate the best possible replacement 😆
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
I tried variations of this on a flapping goose standing in shallow water for practice - selecting deliberately badly as it had a well defined reflection and also some broken reflection around that
Body only/Body and just the strong, clear reflection both had elements of replace as expected but Body and generous selection of whole reflection did too
By experimentation the deciding factor to (excellent) complete removal was found to be selecting some choppy/splashed water behind the flapping goose - understandable but unexpected that the AI seemed to create something to create the area of choppy water too. Interesting whether that is a broader version of creating an object to create a visible consequence of an object beyond just shadow and reflection
I suppose a vote for being able to use that power to reverse the "problem" of the AI recognising consequences to be able to instruct the AI to please remove this object and anything you recognise as its consquences
Remarkable technology!
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
[Oops, the forum sent me your post as "new" just now. Please ignore my reply.]
@Jordan26437343lemp: "the bad news is that it just replaced it with a different car!"
See this article for how to remove objects more reliably:https://www.lightroomqueen.com/generative-remove-replace/Most complaints about Remove are addressed in the article. But if it doesn't help, please attach a full-resolution JPEG exported from the unmodified original photo, so we and Adobe can see the issue in detail. With nearly everyone who has posted a problem photo, we've been able to show how to quickly remove the desired objects.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
I suggest when you select the 'remove' option it just removes the object, and fills in the background with the surrounding area, rather than replace it with an object that isn't even in the image.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
@Layseahughes: "I suggest when you select the 'remove' option it just removes the object, and fills in the background with the surrounding area, rather than replace it with an object that isn't even in the image."
See this article for how to remove objects more reliably:
https://www.lightroomqueen.com/generative-remove-replace/
Most complaints about Remove are addressed in the article. But if it doesn't help, please attach a full-resolution JPEG exported from the unmodified original photo, so we and Adobe can see the issue in detail. With nearly everyone who has posted a problem photo, we've been able to show how to quickly remove the desired objects.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
completely game changing for editing!!!
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Power line removal in LrC is somewhat a pain. Especially when they cross the sky, buildings and foliage. I have found that Luminar Neo does this extremely well. It somehow recognizes the actually line no matter the background, it takes them out. In LrC the new removal tool is iffy if it does this as well
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
@rossograph: "Power line removal ... In LrC the new removal tool is iffy"
Please attach a full-resolution JPEG exported from the unmodified original photo, so we and Adobe can see the issue in detail. There are examples in this thread of other users removing power lines with Remove, and it's worked well for me.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
I love this feature, but it often gets confused between remove and replace. If I want to remove an object, it will often just replace the object with a similar one and not remove them. You may want to have a checkbox or something to differentiate between the two.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
@AzureSkiesPhotographyAZ: "it often gets confused between remove and replace"
See this article for how to more reliably remove objects rather than replace them:
https://www.lightroomqueen.com/generative-remove-replace/
Most complaints about Remove are addressed in the article. But if it doesn't help, please attach a full-resolution JPEG exported from the unmodified original photo, so we and Adobe can see the issue in detail. With nearly everyone who has posted a problem photo, we've been able to show how to quickly remove the desired objects.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
I tried the Lightroom AI Generative Rmove tool a couple of days before and I'm not as satisfied as I've been used with the Generative AI in Photoshop.
In Lightroom the Generative Remove Tool doesn't have any prompt possible and the tool does... what it wants !
I would have appreciated that this Remove Tool could... remove and fill the area I've selected, but it didn't really !
I'm a studio photographer and I often have parts of my studio background visible on the photos taken with cyclo paper, sometimes not larger enough to fill the whole photo frame. In Photoshop it's easy to remove, but in Lightroom the Generative Remove Tool always trys to recreate the background I wanted to remove ! I'd like the AI to generate the studio paper background to replace the selected "hole", not to generate a new messy background I wanted to delete ! 🙂
So I think the Generative AI Remove Tool in Lightroom should be focused on deleting objects or recreating neutral backgrounds but not creating new objects in place of the ones we want to delete ! Photoshop is the software made for retouching and creating, Lightroom is a photographer tool to prepare images before finalizing them in Photoshop if necessary.
AI tools in Lightroom should be focused on time saving for photographers who want to propose direct clean images to their clients, even if theses pictures are not 100% finalized (my customers select the out-of-LR pictures they prefer and I finalize only these ones in Photoshop). My time-saving goal is just having a simple tool in Lightroom to easily remove objects instead of tre need to transfer the picture in Photoshop and retouch it, even if that's not a finalized image.
The existing traditionnal tools in LR do a good job, but if AI could help us for more complex removals, it would be cool !
Thank you.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
@FabBZH: "I'd like the AI to generate the studio paper background to replace the selected "hole", not to generate a new messy background I wanted to delete !"
Please attach a full-resolution JPEG exported from the unmodified original phot. With nearly everyone who has posted a problem photo, we've been able to show how to quickly remove the desired objects. But it would be good for Adobe to see examples where it's not working well.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Wow nice
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
personally i am not thrilled with it, in fact i was very disappointed with it compared to other brands. i live in a city with a lot of cables( electrical and telephone) in the old city center, and when i use the remove option with IA , it does not remove them, i have to do it manually. different thing on PS instead
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
What's the point of restricting how many times on can use it. There are lots of issues with it despite the author pretend all the faults are with the user. My iPad only Lightroom tells me I have zero credit out of 50. Most were used up trying umpteen times to get some near desired results. As I raised before in this thread, all it does try am I formed guess. There is no real way for it to be absolutely certain and hence this arbitrary cut-off is not appropriate. My AI tells me that this gimmick will become pay as you use feature.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Overall I have been very happy with the results from this feature in LrC. Usually one of the first 3 versions offered works well. The only time I have a problem is with objects at the very edge of the frame.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
@Eric Wessman: "The only time I have a problem is with objects at the very edge of the frame."
@CarloBarbieriPh: "a lot of cables( electrical and telephone) in the old city center, and when i use the remove option with IA , it does not remove them"
With objects touching the very edge of the image (such as cables), the beta ("early access") Remove has some gotchas that trip people up. Before doing Remove, you have to undo any Crop, Lens Corrections, and Transform, to expose hidden pixels near the edge. Then for many cameras for which Camera Raw applies a hidden crop of border pixels, you have to carefully select beyond the visible edge. This article gives more details:
https://www.lightroomqueen.com/generative-remove-replace/
Most complaints about Remove are addressed in the article, and once you know how to work around the rough edges, the tool works very well most of the time. But if that article doesn't help, please attach a full-resolution JPEG exported from the unmodified original photo, so we and Adobe can see the issue in detail. With nearly everyone who has posted a problem photo, we've been able to show how to quickly remove the desired objects.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
I removed a trash can in an compicated image using object aware. It did a good job replacing the trash can with its surroundings, but a small amount of the replacement was blurred as if at a different focus.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
it includes all that and don't work.
I always rely on photoshop to remove anything. the remove tab in lightroom needs a lot more work, not a clue why they sent it out other than this... to get feed back. don't they have people working there to see how bad it is, get it to a good level and then send it out. its ok for dust spots...
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
@Andrew_Hill6878: "don't work."
Many, many people here are finding it works well. The beta ("early access") Remove does have some rough edges that are easy to accommodate once you learn how to use the tool. See this article for how to remove objects more reliably:
https://www.lightroomqueen.com/generative-remove-replace/
Most complaints about Remove are addressed in the article. But if it doesn't help, please attach a full-resolution JPEG exported from the unmodified original photo, so we and Adobe can see the issue in detail. With nearly everyone who has posted a problem photo, we've been able to show how to quickly remove the desired objects.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
I have tried this a couple of times and find it has left a shadow of the area I was trying to remove - not impressed so far
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
@creative_7207: "it has left a shadow of the area I was trying to remove"
This can happen if you're applying Remove on top of an existing AI mask (e.g. Sky). Do the menu command Settings > Update AI Settings to recompute the mask. In general, apply Remove first, then AI masks. If it doesn't help, please attach a full-resolution JPEG exported from the unmodified original photo, so we and Adobe can see the issue in detail. With nearly everyone who has posted a problem photo, we've been able to show how to quickly remove the desired objects.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Generative Remove really is an incredible feature! To be able to remove simple items that otherwise would have taken hours of cloning and blending of pixels is a godsend! My only request would be that when removing features that cover subjects faces, if the feature could, where possible, use information about the subjects actual face, possibly gleaned from when Lightroom identified individual faces on import, to rebuild the subjects face and provide a more accurate portrayal, would be an immesurably beneficial addition.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
La agregación de esta herramienta IA está muy buena porque todo lo podemos trabajar en el mismo Lightroom y al eliminar objetos el trabajo es más rápido. Le pueden agregar el cambio de cielo a Lightroom, ya que Photoshop lo tiene incorporado y sería más rápido trabajar en un solo programa, que esto es común en muchas fotografías de cambiar el cielo.