Lazy Composer 2 is a post-processing add-on designed to give Blender renders a cinematic finish with minimal effort and limited soul-searching. It runs entirely inside Blender’s compositor and focuses on film emulation, colour grading and optical effects commonly associated with live-action footage. According to its developer, the goal is to reduce the need for manual node setups while still offering detailed control.
The add-on provides sliders for exposure, balance, contrast, temperature, tint, vibrance, saturation, gamma and three-way colour correction. These are presented in a single interface rather than spread across multiple compositor nodes. The controls resemble those found in dedicated grading applications, although Lazy Composer 2 operates strictly within Blender.

Grain, Glow and Other Regrettable Decisions
In addition to colour adjustments, Lazy Composer 2 includes effects such as film grain, lens distortion, chromatic aberration, bloom, glow, Bokeh, glint and halation. These effects can be layered to simulate film response and lens behaviour, or pushed far enough to raise quiet questions in dailies. The add-on ships with more than 20 presets intended as starting points rather than declarations of artistic intent.
The developer states that parameter changes can be previewed in real time. Full post-processing reportedly adds around two seconds per frame on an RTX 4070 GPU, which is fast enough to feel interactive but slow enough to remind users that nothing in life is free.

Free, Paid and Still Subjective
Lazy Composer 2 requires Blender 5.0 or later. A Free edition includes a reduced feature set covering core effects such as film grain, chromatic aberration, vignette, glow and halation. A Pro edition adds expanded grading tools, more presets and additional controls, priced at $12at press time, with a regular price of 25 USD.
Lazy Composer 2 does not replace dedicated colour grading software and makes no claim to do so. It is positioned as a finishing tool for artists who want to stay inside Blender and avoid round-tripping renders into other applications.
As with any new post-processing tool, Lazy Composer 2 should be tested carefully before use in actual production environments, especially when deadlines, clients and taste are involved, appliyng blindly is not recomended even if presets look nice today.
