Lightroom Lorrayne Mavromatis - Tokyo Preset Adobe

Lorrayne Mavromatis is a photographer and content creator known for her evocative travel imagery and educational photography resources. Based in Australia but frequently traveling, she has cultivated a signature style that blends moody undertones with rich, saturated colors. Her presets are widely used by influencers and hobbyists seeking to elevate their mobile and desktop photography without requiring extensive knowledge of color grading.

Visual: Fast montage of Tokyo streets + preset being applied to a “before” photo.

Script:

“Want to make your night photos look like a scene from a sci-fi film? Meet the TOKYO Preset by Lorrayne Mavromatis. TOKYO Preset Adobe Lightroom Lorrayne Mavromatis

With just one click, it adds deep teal shadows, punchy red highlights, and a soft, moody glow that’s perfect for neon-lit streets and rainy city nights.

It works on mobile and desktop Lightroom – and trust me, your urban photography will never look the same.

Grab the link in the description. And don’t forget to tag @LorrayneMavromatis when you use it.” Lorrayne Mavromatis is a photographer and content creator


| Preset | Style | Best use | |--------|-------|-----------| | TOKYO (Lorrayne Mavromatis) | Soft teal-orange, faded blacks | Night street, rain, neon | | Cyberpunk 2077 (various) | High contrast, magenta/cyan, intense | Extreme sci-fi look | | Samuel Elkins – City | Muted, desaturated, earthy | Daytime urban | | Peter McKinnon – City Lights | High clarity, sharp, contrasty | Night action |

Verdict: TOKYO is less aggressive than Cyberpunk presets but more stylized than generic city presets.


Value: Good if you specialize in night street photography. Average if you want an all-purpose preset. “Want to make your night photos look like


The TOKYO preset is generally available as a .dng file (for mobile) or .xmp file (for desktop Lightroom). It is designed to be a "base" edit. Because lighting conditions vary drastically—from the bright lights of Shibuya to a dimly lit alley in Shinjuku—users are encouraged to adjust the Exposure and White Balance sliders after applying the preset to perfect the image.

Presets are a starting point, not a finish line. Here is how to get the "Lorrayne Mavromatis" look correctly:

1. Start with Exposure The preset is slightly "contrasty." If you shot during overcast weather (common in Tokyo), you may need to bump your Exposure slider to +0.3 or +0.7 after applying the preset to recover shadow detail in faces.

2. The White Balance Trick The TOKYO preset leans cool (approximately 4800K). If you apply it to photos taken in golden hour, it will kill the warmth. Mavromatis recommends using this preset only for:

3. Masking for Portraits If you are shooting portraits with neon in the background, apply the preset to the background first. Then, using an AI mask in Lightroom, paint the subject’s skin back to a warmer tone. The preset makes Asian skin tones look beautifully olive/natural, but fair skin can turn too magenta if left unchecked.