This website takes JPG photos and shows how they were edited in Lightroom

Dunja Đuđić

Dunja Djudjic is a multi-talented artist based in Novi Sad, Serbia. With 15 years of experience as a photographer, she specializes in capturing the beauty of nature, travel, concerts, and fine art. In addition to her photography, Dunja also expresses her creativity through writing, embroidery, and jewelry making.

If it happens to you to see a photo and wish you could recreate the look, you will find this website really handy. Piotr Chmolowski has launched Pixel Peeper, a website that reads EXIF data from JPG image and instantly shows what process was used for editing in Lightroom, as well as the camera settings. We chatted with Piotr about his project and the plans for the future, and it seems there will be a lot more useful stuff for photographers on this website.

As Piotr explains, when he returned to taking photos after a long break, he was amazed by the editing skills of the photographers whose work he admired. He would often ask himself “how do they do it?” and realized that the info is, in most cases, right in the file.

Since Lightroom saves all the adjustments in EXIF data by default (unless you disable it), he used this data from other photographers’ photos to experiment with his own images. Eventually, he built a website that scrapes this data in a matter of seconds and shows how a certain photo was edited.

I must say, I find Pixel Peeper very user-friendly and simple, and I even like the layout. I asked Piotr about some future development plans, and first of all – does he plan to make it mobile friendly. Currently, some users complain they can’t use the app from their phones, but Piotr says he’ll be working on this feature:

I wanted to release the first version as soon as possible and mobile-friendliness wasn’t a priority for me, as I anticipated it would be a desktop tool. But it seems that people want to be able to use it on mobile, so I’ll try to work on that as soon as I get a chance.

What I noticed on Pixel Peeper is that you can only download a photo from someone’s website or photo sharing page, and then upload it and get the readings. So I asked Piotr if he plans to make possible that the Lightroom edits are read by pasting the image URL. It would be much faster and handier. Piotr knows this, and he says this is on top of his TO DO list. So, I guess we’ll see this quite soon.

This concept isn’t entirely new. For example, Capture Monkey’s Preset Ripper does the same thing, but it functions as a Lightroom plugin. I asked Piotr if he plans to make something similar, and as it turns out – the feature already exists:

Currently it *is* possible to do that, but the feature is not 100% finished yet, so I’ve hidden it. If you want to download the preset, simply append “.lrtemplate” to the URL, for example: https://pixelpeeper.io/r5c3fd2y.lrtemplate

Personally, I quite like this idea, because it allows you to learn different Lightroom editing processes. You can go step by step to copy the look, and understand which setting does what. Even the creator of the website himself says he’s learned a lot about it this way. If you were wondering if it’s possible for Photoshop – it isn’t. As Piotr explains, this is because Photoshop doesn’t embed this kind of metadata.

Although this website is really neat, and about to become even better, there’s one limitation (but it can’t be attributed to the developer). Some social networks and websites remove the EXIF data from photos, so you won’t have any readings. I think it’s the same for Flickr, as I was unable to copy the editing style of my own photos. Still, you can use photos from many other websites. And of course, you can use your own photos if you want to recreate a certain look. Either way, I believe you’ll find Pixel Peeper useful, both as a learning tool or as a shortcut to the desired look of your photos.

[Pixel Peeper via Reddit]


Filed Under:

Tagged With:

Find this interesting? Share it with your friends!

Dunja Đuđić

Dunja Đuđić

Dunja Djudjic is a multi-talented artist based in Novi Sad, Serbia. With 15 years of experience as a photographer, she specializes in capturing the beauty of nature, travel, concerts, and fine art. In addition to her photography, Dunja also expresses her creativity through writing, embroidery, and jewelry making.

Join the Discussion

DIYP Comment Policy
Be nice, be on-topic, no personal information or flames.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

12 responses to “This website takes JPG photos and shows how they were edited in Lightroom”

  1. Will Bartels Avatar

    Photo can’t have the META/EXIF data stripped. Which a vast majority of websites do. (Facebook and Instagram) As well as Id argue that a large population of people strip this data when exporting from Lightroom. Why wouldn’t you?

    1. Will Bartels Avatar

      James Bees Wax what? That’s literally what I just said. “I’d argue that a large population of people strip this data when exporting from lightroom”

  2. Larry Carr Avatar

    This is the equivalent to plagiarism for images. IMO. The thing about photography is that it’s art, if you lack creativity and have to copy someone else than you’re doing the wrong thing.

    1. Rick Scheibner Avatar
      Rick Scheibner

      Plagiarism? How do you copyright Clarity=12? They’re simply settings, and not works of art unto themselves.

    2. Scott Valentine Avatar

      That’s an interesting way to look at it. I was thinking for lots of people it would be tool to help understand the process, but given just how many people are apt to apply presets and call it good, you may be right.

    3. Justin Smith Avatar

      It’s like using the same paint as another artist, not plagiarism. People have an idea of what they want the photo to look like, they just need to learn the skills of how to do it. Why not learn from the best?

    4. Larry Carr Avatar

      Justin Smith the paint that your referring to would be Lightroom itself. this site doesn’t just show you the settings, it allows you to download the settings into a preset. Using this site to make presets of people’s work would be like using the artists Paint, brushes, brush strokes, and technique. What would they learn if all they have to do is click on the preset? The way to learn Lightroom is to dive in and make adjustments and see what those adjustments do.

      1. John HFH Avatar
        John HFH

        What’s the point of a pre set if you start off with a differently exposed image, with different colours, dynamic range, subject matter, etc. Might as well slap some random filter on it. Where’s the fun in that?

    5. Scott Valentine Avatar

      Larry Carr To be fair, presets are generally a starting point, so the original image has to have some similar characteristics until you get to serious filtering that completely dominates the image.

      Of course some people will abuse it, but others may actually learn.

  3. countervail Avatar
    countervail

    pixelpeeper.com comes up as blocked from security threats. Is this an OK site to visit?

  4. John Shark Avatar

    That should be interesting..