Shooting a wedding can easily produce 2,000 to 4,000 RAW files in a single day. If you’re editing each image individually, you’re losing hours (and probably your sanity). The good news? Once you master how to batch edit photos in Lightroom, you can deliver a polished, cohesive gallery in a fraction of the time.
This step-by-step workflow is the exact process we use at Impact Photography to deliver hundreds of consistent, beautifully edited wedding images to our clients.
Why Batch Editing Matters for Wedding Photographers
A wedding gallery isn’t just a collection of pretty photos. It’s a story, and that story needs to feel cohesive from the first detail shot to the last reception dance. Batch editing in Lightroom helps you:
- Maintain a consistent style across the entire gallery
- Cut editing time from days to hours
- Reduce decision fatigue
- Deliver galleries faster (clients love this)
- Scale your business without sacrificing quality
Step 1: Import and Organize Your Wedding Files
Before you can batch edit anything, your files need to live in a logical structure. During import in Lightroom Classic:
- Create a parent folder named after the couple and date (e.g., Smith_Wedding_2026-04-18)
- Apply a basic import preset with lens corrections and a starting profile
- Add keywords like ceremony, reception, portraits
- Build 1:1 previews so culling later is buttery smooth
Step 2: Cull Ruthlessly Before You Edit
Editing 4,000 images is a nightmare. Editing 600 hand-picked keepers is manageable. Culling is the most important time saver in your workflow.
Quick Culling Tips
- Use the X key to reject obvious throwaways (closed eyes, blurry, test shots)
- Use P to flag picks
- Filter by flagged status, then refine with star ratings
- Consider third-party tools like Photo Mechanic or Narrative Select for ultra-fast culling
Step 3: Group Photos by Lighting Scenario
This is the secret most tutorials skip. You cannot batch edit a whole wedding with one click because lighting changes constantly. Instead, group your culled images into scenes:
- Bridal prep (window light)
- Groom prep
- First look (outdoor, open shade)
- Ceremony (mixed light)
- Family formals
- Couple portraits (golden hour)
- Reception details
- Reception dancing (flash + ambient)
Each scene gets its own batch edit. Within a scene, lighting is consistent enough that one master edit can sync across all images.
Step 4: Nail the White Balance on Your Anchor Image
Pick one strong representative photo from each scene. This is your anchor image. Before applying any preset:
- Use the White Balance Selector (W) and click on a neutral gray or white area
- Fine-tune the temperature and tint sliders to taste
- Set your exposure baseline
- Adjust highlights and shadows for the scene
Getting the foundation right on the anchor image means your preset will sit on top of accurate colors, not fight against a green cast from reception uplighting.
Step 5: Apply Your Wedding Preset
Presets are your style in a click. After your white balance is corrected, apply your signature preset to the anchor image. Then tweak:
- Exposure adjustments specific to that scene
- HSL tweaks for skin tones
- Tone curve for contrast preferences
Step 6: Sync Settings Across the Batch
This is the heart of how to batch edit photos in Lightroom. Here are the three methods we use depending on the situation:
| Method | When to Use | How |
|---|---|---|
| Sync | Identical lighting, same scene | Select anchor + target images, click Sync, choose settings |
| Auto Sync | Live tweaking across many photos | Toggle the switch next to Sync, edits apply in real time |
| Copy / Paste | Selective settings to non-adjacent images | Ctrl/Cmd+Shift+C, then paste to selected photos |
Pro Tip: Use Auto Sync for Ceremony Sequences
During ceremonies, light shifts subtly as clouds move or candles flicker. Turn on Auto Sync, select the entire ceremony group, and small exposure adjustments propagate instantly across the batch.
Step 7: Refine Outliers Individually
Batch editing gets you 90% of the way there. Always do a final pass to catch:
- Backlit shots that need extra shadow recovery
- Mixed lighting where white balance drifts
- Hero images that deserve extra polish (first kiss, first dance)
Step 8: Build and Use Export Presets for Client Galleries
Don’t waste time setting export options every single time. Create dedicated export presets for each delivery format.
Recommended Wedding Export Presets
| Preset Name | Resolution | Quality | Use Case |
|---|---|---|---|
| Client Gallery Full | Full resolution | 85 | Pixieset, Cloudspot delivery |
| Print Ready | Full, 300 DPI, sRGB | 100 | Album design, prints |
| Web / Social | 2048px long edge | 76 | Instagram, blog posts |
| Sneak Peek | 1500px long edge | 80 | Quick same-week previews |
Step 9: AI-Assisted Batch Edits in 2026
Lightroom’s AI tools have come a long way. Use them strategically inside your batch workflow:
- Adaptive Presets with subject and sky masks apply intelligently to each unique image
- AI Denoise can be queued in batches for high-ISO reception shots
- Lens Blur and Generative Remove save touch-up time on outliers
Apply adaptive presets last in your sync, since they recalculate per image and add a creative finish without flattening your edits.
Common Batch Editing Mistakes to Avoid
- Syncing white balance across different lighting scenarios is the #1 mistake. Group first, sync second.
- Forgetting to sync local adjustments. If you used a radial filter on the anchor, make sure it’s checked in the sync dialog.
- Skipping the final pass. Always scroll through your final selection before exporting.
- Editing without calibration. A non-calibrated monitor will sabotage your batch consistency.
Sample Wedding Editing Timeline
| Stage | Time (3000 images) |
|---|---|
| Import + previews | 30 min |
| Culling | 1.5 hours |
| Anchor edits + sync per scene | 2 hours |
| Final refinement pass | 1.5 hours |
| Export | 45 min (background) |
FAQ
Can I batch edit photos in Lightroom Mobile?
Yes. Edit one image, tap the three-dot menu, choose Copy Settings, then select multiple images and tap Paste Settings. It’s not as deep as Classic, but it works for sneak peeks on the go.
Does Lightroom have AI batch editing?
Yes. As of 2026, Lightroom offers Adaptive Presets, AI masking, AI Denoise, and Generative Remove that all work in batch contexts. Combine them with Sync for the most powerful results.
What’s the difference between Sync and Auto Sync?
Sync applies your current settings to selected images on demand. Auto Sync applies edits in real time as you make them, across all selected images simultaneously.
How do I batch edit in the web version of Lightroom?
In Lightroom Web, edit one photo, right click and choose Copy Edit Settings, then select your target photos and choose Paste Edit Settings. Functionality is more limited than Classic, so for full weddings we still recommend Classic.
Can I batch edit RAW and JPEG files together?
Technically yes, but settings interpret differently between the formats. For wedding work, stick to RAW for batch consistency.
Final Thoughts
Mastering how to batch edit photos in Lightroom is the single biggest leap a wedding photographer can make for productivity. Cull tight, group by scene, sync smart, and lean on export presets. Your weekends (and your clients) will thank you.
Want us to handle the editing for you? Impact Photography offers full wedding editing services with consistent, gallery-ready results. Reach out and reclaim your time behind the camera, not the screen.