Not sure if you are "into" the use of Lightroom Presets yet: they can be used as-is, or modified, and also saved and named by their user/creator/borrower. Lightroom Presets are fantastic tools, and can be created on-the-spot, for a specific type of shot, and can easily be saved, and then pasted-on, to entire series' worth of photos, if needed. There are many Lightroom presets for sale, from well-known shooters who specialize in portraiture,weddings, landscapes, etc.
Lindsay Adler has a nice, short video on how to create/modify, and then save and name one's very own Lightroom Preset. Once you "get into" the idea that a well-chosen preset can save huge amounts of time, and can actually improve certain types of photos on a consistent basis, it becomes a massive time-saver AND an artistic improvement.
A Lightroom preset offers the option for the user to simply "Scroll Down the List" on the left, and to literally SEE/preview the effects of various presets on the image being worked on. The B&W color filter effects that come with Lightroom are very,very good. Former Lightroom guru Matt K (spelling on K is multi, silent-syllable type name) used to offer a large set of his pre-sets, about 15 of which I find indispensable. He had some great vignettes, and some nice "color effects" that people actually LIKE. Again, the user can custom-modify ANY preset!!!
You can also select on, and then modify it: you can save that, or just copy it to the clipboard, and "paste it on". A preset is not locked-in: it can be modified, then saved, or just copied and pasted, and then discarded.
Watch Lindsay Adler's video on how to create a custom preset. Once you have tried LR presets, and saved or borrowed or bought a few, you will begin to understand how much space, time, and disk space parametric editing saves.