The Lightroom CC ecosystem has been updated today, with updates for Windows & Mac (1.5). The iOS (3.4) and Android (3.6) updates will ship within a few weeks. (.) And there’s some even bigger news is finally finished! Store Album Locally (Windows/Mac) If you know you’re going to be offline, you can now right-click on an album and choose to store that album’s originals locally, just as you can on the mobile apps. Unchecking it reverts to automatic cache management. Album Membership (Windows/Mac) At the bottom of the Info panel, you can now see which albums include the selected photo, and if you click on one of the tokens, Lightroom opens the selected album. Improved Filtering (Windows/Mac/iOS) On Windows/Mac, there’s additional search functionality for the text search field, so you can narrow down your search by the type of metadata, such as extension:cr2.
There’s a full list of search tokens in. On iOS, the Filter menu is being updated to include the Camera, Location, Keywords and Edit Status filters that are already available on the desktop. New Organize View (iOS – coming soon) The iOS Organize view is having a bit of facelift. It’s being split into two tabs – My Photos and Shared Albums – just like the web interface. This gives you easy access to the albums you’ve shared with others, as well as your full album hierarchy.
There are also new LR Camera Photos and Recently Added smart albums, as these photos can quickly get lost in All Photos. Other Features (iOS/Android – coming soon) In the Grid view on iOS, the multi-select mode is changing to match the Android behavior, so you long-press on a photo to enter selection mode and then choose to copy/move/remove/delete/share photos, rather than selecting the action and then the photos. It makes sense when you try it!
On iOS, you’ll soon be able to export more than 15 photos at a time, which is a. On iOS, HDR/Long Exposure files will be up to 2/3rds smaller without visual quality loss, thanks to some clever compression. The Remove Chromatic Aberrations checkbox and lens profile pop-ups are now available in the Optics panel on the Android apps (but are not yet available on iOS).
Tech Previews (iOS/Android – coming soon) Coming soon to iOS, there’s a new Depth Map Support tech preview. To create the depth mask, use the Portrait mode in the iOS camera or the new Depth Capture mode in Lightroom’s camera (HEIC format only). When you go to Selective Editing mode, you can select the existing depth mask, adjust the range and then further edit the mask using the brush and sliders. This allows you to create fake depth of field, darken backgrounds, and more.
Already available on Lightroom Web as a tech preview, and coming soon to the Android app is the Best Photos feature. It uses Adobe Sensei artificial intelligence as well as edits that you’ve made to your photos to automatically select the photos it thinks have the highest potential, quickly and easily. These are both disabled by default, but can be enabled in Settings Technology Previews. HEIF Support (Windows & Android) With the release of iOS 11, Apple announced that its newest devices would default to a new photo file format/container called HEIF, which stands for High Efficiency Image Format.
It uses a more modern compression method than JPEG, so the file sizes are smaller. In the last release, Adobe added support on macOS 10.13 and iOS11+, but those files are now also supported on Windows, and will shortly be supported on Android too. HEVC videos are not currently supported. New Camera Support (All Versions) When a new camera is released, standardized formats such as JPEG, TIFF and DNG are supported immediately. Proprietary raw file formats are not standardized, so they must be individually added in a Lightroom release. Most cameras are supported within 2-3 months of their release. Raw file format support has been added in this release for:.
Parrot Anafi. Sony DSC-RX100M5A. Sony DSC-RX100M6. Click to view the. New Lens Profiles (All Versions) Many compact and mirrorless cameras have built-in lens profiles, but other cameras use lens profiles to correct for lens defects such as barrel/pincushion distortion and vignetting.
New profiles are added with each Lightroom release. Click here for the. How do I update? To update on the desktop, go to Help menu Updates or click the Update button in the CC app. The update servers take a while to push the updates around the world, to avoid crashing the servers.
You can also open the Creative Cloud app, click the icon (top right) and select Check for Updates to give it a nudge. Lightroom CC book now available!
Now the big news my brand is available to download right now! It covers the whole Lightroom CC ecosystem, whether you’re using Windows, Mac, iOS, Android, Apple TV or the web interface (but not Lightroom Classic, except migrating). You can (And if you’re already subscribed to my newsletter, look out for an email in the next 24 hours with a special gift!) Most Lightroom CC books are out of date before they even ship, but I’m including a year’s eBook updates with your purchase, and you can extend your access at a low cost, so you always have the latest information.
The book already includes today’s new desktop features, and there will be an update for the new mobile features when they ship in a few weeks. The paperback versions are expected to ship early in September, complete with those new mobile features. The has also been updated today, and updated download links are being emailed out to everyone who previously requested that eBook. Save Save Save Save Save Save Save Save Save Save Save Save Save Save Save Save Save Save Save Save Save Save Save Save Save Save Save Save Save Save Save Save Save Save Filed Under. Have been eagerly awaiting the August 2018 Lightroom Updates, hoping Adobe would stick with their consistent launch update schedule though didn’t know if they would delay and wait for the Mojave release next month incase anything breaks before the final release. Bit surprised by the very limited number of Mac/Window CC updates. Being able store Albums is nice though one could have already choose which images to save locally.
Album membership is also a plus but something along the lines of things I imagined we’d see added after all the deal breaker missing features were first added. The lack of all the advanced search filters in CC vs Classic is certainly one of those major missing features, so I’m excited to see that and if it were full/near search filter feature parity that along would make it a significant update.
However, just updated and looking at the search filter options and not seeing anything new other than maybe an icon for video/filter. Perhaps they are all there now but hidden via search terms rather than exposing them via search bar, so will have to investigate more. Otherwise perhaps we will see another update when Mojave is released with more significant tent pole updates such as ability to rename files and apply presets on import, full meta support, full export support, face tagging, ability to compare images, Mac Portrait Mode and Mac Live Photos full support, and such. Still overall good news to see the consistent updates even if more minor on desktop than those hoping for CC to catch up to Classic sooner than later.
I waited a few days to install this release and did it today. Unfortunately it created problems with my develop presets and export preset sets. I run LR on a MacBook Pro and a Windows 10 Desktop (both with current OS updates) and now the current version of LR Classic based on the release of last week.
Interestingly my commercially purchased develop presets and my own presets are there but any of the LR default presets are gone. Also all of my custom export presets are gone. I had avoided all of the previous problems with presents in previous versions of Classic but they finally seem to have got me. I did some web searching but the age of answers and the conflicting answers caused me to stop and post here before I start trying to trouble shoot and create more problems. Any suggestions?
Interested in Lightroom? Whether you’re just getting started with Lightroom, or you’ve been learning for a while, you’ll love these FREE Lightroom eBooks. You’ll learn not only how to get started, but more importantly, how to avoid the most frequent problems. There are Quick Start eBooks for both the traditional desktop-based Lightroom Classic CC, and for the new Lightroom CC cloud ecosystem. The eBooks are yours to download absolutely FREE when you sign up for my free monthly Lightroom newsletter using the form below.
I won’t share your email address or send a load of spam.
Download Adobe Photoshop Lightroom Classic CC 2018 for Mac latest version free standalone offline setup for Mac OS X. Adobe Photoshop Lightroom Classic CC 2018 7.0 is a raw image management and editing application with numerous options and tools to enhance digital photography. Adobe Photoshop Lightroom Classic CC 2018 Review Photoshop Lightroom is known for its best image processing capabilities. The latest version tends to deliver better performance and specific environment to process RAW image files with a wide range of options and tools so to take your digital photography to an ultimate level. You can also call it as a dark room for your digital photography which simplifies and automates the manual work and allow you to finalize your digital images.
It is a very precise tool which automatically corrects most of the issues and provides the ability to manually adjust the remaining issues. This wonderful application comes with five different stages to deliver the final product. Moreover, it provides a digital library to manage the pictures as well as you can also create slideshows and albums with exporting capabilities.
Add meta description to the images and add the location in the Map section. In addition, you can adjust the brightness, contrast, vibration, tone, curve, color, and many other settings. Editing is not limited to just these adjustments, you can also adjust different details such as noise, sharpness, camera calibration and different effects.