As for ease of use, I guess I would trust a simpleton with "Lightroom" in the way I wouldn't trust him to use Lightroom Classic, but "experienced photo editors" sets the bar much too high. "Organisation and finding photos" implies the cloud solution is equivalent - artificial intelligence might have its advantages and promise, but you can tag and find stuff in more reliably in Classic. You pick up on backup, and here the comparison might be "Done by Adobe" versus "You're in control" which would put a very different spin on the matter, and in the latter case you can also back up your adjustment work and other metadata. Yet Adobe did such a great job integrating Lightroom Classic and the mobile apps.
"Where you like to work" implies someone shouldn't choose Classic if they want to work away from the desktop. Simplistic summaries like this chart are always misleading. Lightroom Catalog Helper.lrdata is the folder search cache Mobile Downloads.lrdata is the default location for photos downloaded from the cloud by Lightroom Classic Lightroom Masters is probably where youve stored your original photos Lightroom CC files: Lightroom Library. For example, you can search for 'dog' to find photos of dogs in Lightroom CC without having to manually assign the keyword 'dog' to any photos.įor related information, see Go from Lightroom Classic to Lightroom. In a way, profiles are like Lightroom presets. That interpretation was created by someone that says the colors of your RAW image should look like x, and it should have an x amount of contrast. Lightroom also provides features that are based in the cloud, such as the ability to search for photos based on what's in the photo - without having to add any keywords manually. Adobe’s Lightroom plan costs the same (still £9.98), and although you don’t get Lightroom Classic or Photoshop, you get waaaaay more storage 1TB this time, which should be enough for. In Lightroom and Adobe Camera Raw (ACR), a profile is used to interpret your RAW file into the colors and tones that you see.For example, you can use Lightroom to access all your photos on multiple computers such as a laptop and a desktop, or a home computer, and a work computer. It also means that Lightroom can do various things that Lightroom Classic can't. This means that all your photos are safely backed up.
Lightroom on Mac and Windows share a similar and consistent experience with other Lightroom apps on mobile and web. Lightroom is more formally called 'Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 2.' This is what Im reviewing in this article. Adobe Lightroom 6 allows users to import from a computer, memory card, digital camera and more giving a unified experience.While Lightroom and Lightroom Classic differ in several ways, there are three main things that separate them: This table shows some key differences as well Check out this video that explains the differences