For Haggar, photography is something you do with a camera, not a computer, so he likes to get as much right in-camera as he can. He uses Adobe Lightroom to carry out basic editing on his files. “Typical edits would be cropping to a different aspect ratio, taking care of any highlights where necessary and possibly bringing out shadows, and converting to monochrome,” he says. “I don’t do much editing to my double exposures – if anything, it’s just minor adjustments to shadows and highlights. Sometimes, I will enhance the detail using the Texture adjustment (pictured, above), if there’s stone or bark in the image, for example. That said, I think you can do anything you want with double exposures – I see them as something very creative, an artistic…