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We’ve spent the past week playing around with the app and in addition to insights, we’ll also provide original photographs edited entirely in Filmborn. Filmborn is striving to set itself apart by creating an all-encompassing film emulation workflow that ensures photos will have similar aesthetics across the board, whether you’re shooting with the actual film stock or emulating it on your desktop and mobile device.īelow, we break down our hands-on into three separate categories: UI, presets, and editing tools. There are dozens of film emulation apps available for download, from VSCO and Black to Rebelsauce and RNI Films, just to name a few. In the ever-evolving world of analogue photography emulation, a new competitor has emerged: Filmborn. Meticulously crafted by the team behind Mastin Labs Lightroom and Adobe Camera Raw presets, Filmborn is an iOS-exclusive app designed to bring film stock emulation to the iPhone. The presets may need a bit of tweaking to look right with the images that come from your smartphone camera because they can be very different from raw files you’re used to working with in desktop Lightroom, but it’s certainly a start. Once the settings are copied, it’s just a simple paste to apply the preset. This time you should have the option to paste the settings. Now, you simply select the image to which you want to apply the preset and long press to bring up the menu again. You can select which edits will be copied over to the new image. Selecting it will let you pick and choose the specific edits you want to copy over.
![mastin labs mobile presets mastin labs mobile presets](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/62/b1/ce/62b1ce8e2a866a9697a1ff355b1e9972.jpg)
A long press will bring up the menu, which includes a “copy settings” option. Once you open Lightroom Mobile, the Presets collection will have your image as well as all the edits made to it. You could even make a graphic with the preset name to use as the base image if you plan on keeping a ton of presets on-hand. It makes sense to use visually distinctive photos for each preset or set of edits you want to keep on hand so it’s easy to tell which is which. Once that image is added to the “Presets” collection, it will sync up to Lightroom mobile. Now, find an image in your library and apply the chosen preset or adjustments. The collection I created on the desktop now shows up on the mobile app after syncing. Once you’re syncing, create a collection called “presets.” I named mine “!presets” so it would show up first an in alphabetical list. In order for this to work, you obviously need a Creative Cloud account so you can sync images and collections between the desktop and mobile versions of the software. Create a collection of images with presets applied in the desktop version of Lightroom. Recently, however, a rep from Adobe shared a clever trick to get all of those presets working on the mobile version, and it’s really simple.
![mastin labs mobile presets mastin labs mobile presets](https://files.helpdocs.io/dh6s5am37z/articles/l3wcyff3ae/1610472614704/img-6551.jpg)
One feature that’s not officially supported however, is the use of custom and pre-made presets, like those from VSCO or Mastin Labs. Lightroom Mobile has come a long way since its start, and it now includes the vast majority of the features you expect to find in the desktop version. This image was taken on an iPhone but has been edited using a custom preset based on one of the VSCO presets.