Lightroom is Adobe’s all-in-one photo cataloging, organising and editing tool. Unlike Photoshop, however, which handles photography, illustration and design, Lightroom is purely for photographers.
It doesn’t have Photoshop’s in-depth manipulation, layering, selection and compositing tools. But for regular photo enhancement and repair, it’s fast, efficient and powerful – and all its adjustments are non-destructive.
In October 2017 Adobe took a bold step, splitting Lightroom into two products, the new Lightroom CC and a continuation of the old Lightroom as ‘Lightroom Classic’.
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Lightroom Classic sticks to the old desktop storage model. The new Lightroom CC is slimmer, slicker and based around cloud storage instead. Depending on the Adobe subscription plan you choose, you get Lightroom CC or both versions plus Photoshop – more on this in a moment.
System requirements
Mac:
- Multicore Intel processor with 64-bit support
- Mac OS X v10.11 (El Capitan), macOS v10.12 (Sierra), or macOS v10.13 (High Sierra)
- 4 GB of RAM
- 1 GB of Video RAM (VRAM)
- 10 GB available hard-disk space
- OpenGL 3.3–capable video adapter for GPU-related functionality
PC:
- Intel or AMD processor with 64-bit support
- Windows 10 (64-bit) Version 1511 or later
- 4 GB of RAM
- 1 GB of Video RAM (VRAM)
- 10 GB available hard-disk space
- OpenGL 3.3 and DirectX 10-capable video adapter for GPU-related functionality
The key feature of Lightroom CC 2018 is that your entire image library is available everywhere, on any device. This is different to Lightroom Classic, where it’s only chosen Collections which are synchronised, and even then only by using lower-resolution Smart Previews as editing ‘proxies’.
If you’re going to store all your photos online, you’re naturally going to need lots of storage, and this is perhaps the biggest bone of contention. There is a new Lightroom CC subscription plan which gives you Lightroom CC and 1TB of storage, but nothing else.
Or you can stay with the existing Photography Plan and get both versions of Lightroom, and Photoshop, but no extra storage. Both options cost £9.98/$9.99 per month.
Finally, you can get the best of both worlds with the old Photography Plan plus 1TB of storage, but at a cost of £19.97/$19.99 per month. Whichever way you cut it, that 1TB of storage comes in at around £10/$10 per month. Initially, Adobe indicated that extra storage would cost £10/$10 per month per terabyte; now the Adobe website carries the message “Up to 10 TB of cloud storage available. Call for details,” suggesting (we hope) some flexibility.
Lightroom CC 2018’s cloud-based approach comes with significant costs, but it does also have advantages..
Anywhere editing
Fair enough, this is a big one. With Lightroom Classic’s regular desktop storage, you only get to see the image Collections you’ve selected for synchronisation. And while you can organise and even edit images on your smart device and in your web browser, you can’t download the full-resolution versions, only a lower-resolution Smart Preview. That’s fine for placement but you’ll still need to export a full-res version from your desktop library for final use.
Adobe also makes a great play of the new, simpler interface. Lightroom’s workspace has always been pretty oppressive and busy, and Lightroom CC’s stripped-back approach is genuinely refreshing.
A few things have gone, like the separate Library and Develop modules (now in a single window) and the Map, Book, Slideshow, Print and Web modules are gone completely – but then these are features that probably only a small percentage of photographers would use anyway. And if you are one of those, well, there’s still Lightroom Classic.
Smarter organising
Lightroom’s organising tools are indeed simpler. Lightroom Classic and its desktop storage system continues to offer two parallel organisational systems – actual Folders and virtual Collections – which even live in separate panels, while Lightroom CC dumps all your photos into a single giant pot, and then it’s up to you how you want to organise them, using Albums and Folders (not real folders, just virtual containers to organise your albums).
How can something that does less be better? Lightroom CC does force you into a simpler way of working, but it also strips away all the distraction, confusion and indecision of working with Lightroom Classic.
There is one omission that’s quite hard to take, however – you can’t create smart albums (Smart Collections in Lightroom Classic), so you can’t create a smart album to automatically group all the shots taken in Tokyo last November on your Canon EOS 5D Mark IV, for example, or all the shots you’ve taken with a particular lens at a particular ISO setting.
There are filter menus for isolating images by star rating, camera used and more, but even these are much reduced compared to those in Lightroom Classic.
But Lightroom CC’s trump card is Adobe’s web-based Sensei search technology. Adobe says its machine learning/object recognition technology saves you the drudge of manually keywording your images. Well, it does do a good job of recognising object types, such as trees or skies, but it’s less effective at identifying locations, except where images feature a well-known landmark or have embedded location information.
Worry-free storage
Adobe’s idea of worry-free storage is fine in as much as you don’t have to find space for your photos on your own computer or disk drives, or worry about synchronising them across computers or even about backing them up… but you might worry about how much your ever-expanding image library might cost you in the future.
Editing upgrades
The first version of Lightroom CC back in October 2017 was actually missing more than just smart albums and workflow modules. There was no Tone Curve or Split tone panel amongst the editing tools either.
These have been added in a December 2017 update, though, plus automatic image enhancement via Sensei and a full-screen view. Even so, Lightroom CC still lacks some of the bells and whistles of Lightroom Classic, and still doesn’t support plug-ins.
Should you buy Lightroom CC 2018?
Lightroom CC is a frustrating mix of brilliance (the new, streamlined interface) and disappointment (the lack of feature parity with Lightroom Classic). And tempting as the idea of cloud storage might be, the cost seems too high right now – £10/$10 per terabyte, per month, seems out of step with competing cloud services. Apple will rent you 2TB of iCloud storage for £6.99 per month, for example.
Lightroom CC is still a terrific all-in-one image cataloguing and editing tool and it has no cloud-based rivals. The closest are Adobe’s own Lightroom Classic and, say, Phase One Capture One. Capture One is a terrific product, but lacks Lightroom’s multi-platform synchronisation tools.
For designers, it’s a complicated decision. Lightroom CC is great for photos, but that’s all. If you work on projects across Adobe’s creative tools, migrating work from Photoshop, through Illustrator to InDesign, for example, Lightroom CC is a bit of an outlier which might be good for organising your photos but is likely to be on the periphery of your main design work.
Early adopters might be keen to try out a wholly cloud-based photo library, but the regular Photography Plan with its desktop storage is better value (you get both versions of Lightroom and Photoshop) and Lightroom Classic is still a more powerful organising and editing tool.
For designers, Lightroom CC is not so much a ‘must have’ as a ‘might like’.
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Photoshop might be the most powerful tool in the world for image manipulation, but it doesn’t have any in-built photo organizing tools, and it can be slow and cumbersome for everyday photo enhancements.
That’s where Lightroom comes in. It can organize your photos into one large, searchable catalog, and offers a wide range of image adjustments, enhancements and one-click presets. Photoshop is perfect for in-depth image manipulation, but is also set up for artists, illustrators and designers; Lightroom is designed solely for busy photographers.
Now Adobe has released an update which adds in some important tools missing from the first release, so this is the perfect opportunity to see how Lightroom CC really stacks up.
But first, some background. Until October 2017, Lightroom was a regular desktop app that came in two versions. Lightroom CC was part of Adobe’s Creative Cloud subscription program, where you pay a monthly or annual subscription to use the software, while Lightroom 6 was a regular standalone program you paid for once with a regular license feel.
With the Creative Cloud 2017 announcements, though, all this changed. Updates for Lightroom 6 finish at the end of 2017, so effectively the non-subscription version of the software has been discontinued. Adobe has also introduced a new ‘web-first’ version of Lightroom, where your photos are stored in the cloud on Adobe’s servers, rather than locally on your own computer or hard drives.
Confusingly, the new web-based Lightroom keeps the Lightroom CC name. The ‘old’ desktop-based Lightroom CC carries on, but the name has now been changed to Lightroom Classic.
So the ‘new’ Lightroom CC is a bold step into the future for Adobe, and offers photographers the dream scenario, with all their pictures available everywhere on every platform… but how does it pan out in practice?
Image 2 of 2![Classic Classic](https://a.wattpad.com/cover/172638365-352-k7f4128.jpg)
Lightroom interface and workflow
Essentially, there are four phases in the Lightroom workflow: importing, organizing, editing and sharing.
Importing images is straightforward. You click a ‘+’ button in the top-left corner of the screen and choose the folder you want to import from; if you insert a memory card, Lightroom will offer to import images from that too. Lightroom supports JPEGs, TIFF files, PSD (Photoshop) files, and raw files from a huge range of cameras.
In the ‘old’ Lightroom (and Lightroom Classic), you can opt to keep your files where they are and have Lightroom ‘reference’ them in their current position. Here, though, your images are uploaded to Adobe’s servers by default – though you can opt to have them stored locally too, via the Preferences panel.
Once your photos are imported you can set about organizing them, and here Adobe has chosen a very simple and direct approach. Photos are organized simply into albums. You can create a hierarchical filing system by storing albums within folders, but you can’t create ’Smart Albums’ based on search criteria in the way you can with Lightroom Classic.
Within your albums, photos are displayed either as a regular thumbnail grid or as a welcome new Photo Grid display, which seamlessly tiles horizontal and vertical images into an attractive gapless layout.
At the top of the window is a filter bar which you can use to pick out images by rating, flag, type, keyword, camera used or location, and above that is a simple search bar which uses Adobe’s intelligent online ‘Sensei’ search engine to find images according to the subjects they contain. Ultimately, Adobe hopes to eliminate the drudgery of manual keywording, though you do still have the option of typing in your own.
To edit an image, you double-click it and it opens in the same window. The editing tools are arranged in a narrow vertical strip on the right side of the screen.
The connectivity and sharing options are perhaps the most interesting. Lightroom CC takes care of image organizing and editing on your own computer, but you can access the Lightroom Web version on any computer with an internet connection and a web browser, and access not just your whole image library, but simplified versions of the editing and organizing tools too.
There are also Android and iOS Lightroom mobile apps which also synchronize automatically with your online catalog, and which offer their own, surprisingly powerful, editing and organizing tools. Wherever you work, your changes are always synchronized immediately across all your devices.
Performance
Lightroom CC is a streamlined and simplified version of Lightroom Classic, but the initial version had a few things missing that many existing Lightroom users weren't happy about. These included the Tone Curve panel and Split Toning tools, but the big news is that these have now arrived with the December 2017 Lightroom CC update.
The main editing tools are accessed via the Edit button, which displays a vertical ‘stack’ of collapsible adjustment panels for Light, Color, Effects, Detail, Optics and Geometry. Between them, these tools take care of just about all your everyday image adjustments.
The Dehaze tool (Effects panel) is a great way to restore contrast and drama to flat-looking photos, the Optics panel can correct distortion and chromatic aberration to flatter even the most mediocre lenses, while the Geometry panel is terrific for correcting converging verticals and other perspective problems.
Below the Edit tool is a pretty self-explanatory Crop tool, and below that is a Healing Brush/Clone tool that’s extremely effectively at removing sensor spots, and even power lines and other unwanted objects, saving you from having to open up Photoshop to do your retouching.
Below that are three localized adjustment tools for modifying specific areas of an image. You can use the freehand Brush tool for irregular areas, the Linear Gradient tool for toning down bright skies, for example, and the Radial Gradient tool for vignette effects and even for ‘relighting’ your photos.
Between them, these tools take care of the vast majority of image-editing tasks that you might once have needed Photoshop for, and the best news of all is that they’re completely non-destructive – your changes are stored by Lightroom and can be undone or altered at any time in the future. Your original image remains unaltered, and if you want a permanently edited version Lightroom exports a new file with your changes ‘baked in’.
However, there are still some more advanced editing options missing from Lightroom CC in comparison to the Classic version. You don’t get a Camera Calibration panel for simulating the tonal reproduction of your own camera, and the localized adjustment tools don’t have the Auto Mask or Color Range masking options you get with the Classic version, both of which make masking complex outlines and objects much easier.
There’s one more point worth making. Lightroom CC and Adobe Camera Raw share the same raw processing engine, and it’s the default for most photographers. However, it’s not the best; for noise control and detail rendition it’s actually distinctly average. If outright raw image quality is your priority (rather than all-round flexibility), Capture One Pro and DxO PhotoLab (the new name for Optics Pro) are better.
Verdict
The ‘old’ Lightroom Classic remains the most powerful version, but it’s a pretty complex and oppressive place to work, and the new Lightroom CC is like a breath or fresh air. The options are simpler, the interface is cleaner, and the online storage means you no longer have to work out where your images are each time you need them. You lose some things, but you gain a whole lot more.
But this clarity and freedom don’t come cheap, and it’s not a decision to be taken lightly. We’ll get to the detail about Adobe’s various photography plans below, but the bottom line is that Adobe is effectively charging £9.98 / $9.99 / AU$14.29 per month for 1TB of online storage.
That’s enough for now if you’re starting from scratch, but it won’t last forever, especially if you’re a busy photographer shooting raw files with a high-resolution camera. And if you already use Lightroom, there’s a good chance you’re already well beyond this 1TB limit anyway – and Adobe has told us that additional storage will be charged at the same rate of £9.98/$9.99 per terabyte.
Right now, there are three plans to choose from:
Lightroom CC plan: This comes with Lightroom CC and 1TB storage and is £9.98 / $9.99 / AU$14.29 per month. Note that this comes with Lightroom only, not Photoshop.
Photography Plan: This gets you both versions of Lightroom and Photoshop CC for the same price as the Lightroom CC plan, but you don't get the 1TB storage.
Photography Plan with 1TB storage: This offers both Lightroom CC and Lightroom Classic, Lightroom for mobile and web, and Photoshop CC, and 1TB storage, and costs £19.97 / $19.99 / AU$28.59 per month.
Competition
So if you love the idea of an all-in-one photo organizing and editing tool, does Lightroom CC have any rivals? Well, here are three:
Image 1 of 3Adobe Photoshop Lightroom Classic
It’s still going, it’s still very much supported by Adobe, and it keeps your images stored locally. The sharing/synchronizing options are more limited as it works with lower-resolution Smart Previews online and only synchronizses specific Collections, but that’s okay.
Image 2 of 3DxO PhotoLab
With only simple folder browsing tools and no online synchronization, PhotoLab is designed for quality rather than all-in-one versatility, but with its excellent raw processing, lens corrections and new localized adjustment tools it could be just the ticket for quality-conscious raw photographers.
Image 3 of 3Phase One Capture One Pro 11
The just-announced latest version of Phase One’s professional studio tethering, raw conversion, editing and image organizing software is expensive but produces beautiful results. It can’t match Lightroom CC’s all-your-images-everywhere approach, but not everyone needs that.
For years I've been urging Adobe to rebuild its Lightroom image editing software on top of a more robust database than its years-old problem child that randomly corrupts itself and doesn't speak network, among other things.
From now on, I'll be careful what I wish for.
At this year's Adobe Max conference, along with feature and performance updates to the usual suspects, the company rolled out its revamped photography subscription plans -- including the final buh-bye to the you-can-use-it-without-paying-annually version of Lightroom. Before diving into my Opinions, here's the geography of the new terrain.
In a nutshell, Adobe:
- Created a completely new service architected to shelve all of your photos in the cloud, and pull them down on demand for editing with a lightweight desktop application. It's called Lightroom CC. (Formerly Project Nimbus.)
- Rebranded and updated the full-power Lightroom CC as Lightroom Classic CC.
- Turned its previously minimalist Lightroom site into a full edit-and-organize online service.
- Updated its Lightroom iOS and Android apps to work within the new Lightroom CC cloud and share the application's look and feel.
- Updated Photoshop and integrated it better with the Lightroom CC cloud.
- Changed and expanded its photography-related subscription plans to accommodate more storage (which you'll need!).
That makes the new subscription options:
- The existing Creative Cloud Photography plan expands to include all the Lightrooms, Photoshop CC and 20GB for $10 per month. With 1TB it will be $20 per month ($15 per month the first year for current subscribers upgrading to 1TB.)
- A Lightroom CC plan with 1TB for $10 per month.
- A Lightroom mobile plan for just the iOS and Android apps plus 100GB for $5 per month.
![2018 2018](https://karanpc.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/Adobe-Photoshop-Lightroom-Classic-CC-2018.jpg)
All the plans include the paid version of Adobe Spark which lets you replace Adobe's branding with your own and create custom templates.
Who is Lightroom CC for?
Because it's not for Lightroom CC users. Rather than bringing the power of the desktop to mobile and the cloud, Adobe has brought the limitations of mobile to the desktop.
Adobe considers it the solution to the 'doesn't speak network' problem I mentioned earlier, and it syncs all your originals without a problem. It's fast enough that you don't really feel like it's pulling from the cloud, but I also tested it on a fast system with a good network connection. You can even set it to store photos locally, a big concern for a lot of people. Unlike its big brother, it uses a simple single-screen interface for its editing and organization.
It's not bad. But it's Apple Photos, just with sync that works. It's Google Photos, with a few more tools, like radial and linear gradient masks, but without the automation intelligence. It doesn't (yet) have face recognition, book creation or other ancillary capabilities of its competitors, or a plugin architecture to support more. It has to catch up with the competition before it can catch up with its own big brother.
![Adobe photoshop lightroom cc 2018 Adobe photoshop lightroom cc 2018](https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-xLO_lVCJ9YM/Wieq1GkGYcI/AAAAAAAABK0/uTIrI0SeUH8MquQ9SzhIIRFg6RiFfockwCEwYBhgL/s1600/Adobe%2BPhotoshop%2BLightroom%2BClassic%2BCC%2B2018%2B..png)
It treats raw+JPEG as separate files and doesn't even have an icon to indicate which is the raw and which is the JPEG or a way to filter out one or the other. Even the iPad app can do that. Like Apple, Adobe thinks it should hide pesky file names, making it impossible to quickly scan through a sea of images. No color labels, because you can always use the keyword 'red,' right? You can't search or filter on metadata -- but its Sensei machine learning can find all the photos of cats you want.
You have no granular control over what lives locally or selectively sync, which means some people are going to hit that 1TB limit fast. (The Creative Cloud app still doesn't let you selectively sync directories or files after several years, so every time I install on a new system, which I do a lot, it starts syncing the 22,000 files I have in that CC account.) Adobe's ready to serve up more storage in exchange for your money, though.
There's always Lightroom Classic, right?
Yup. And it does sync files with the other versions. But it feels like Adobe doesn't really plan to fix the architectural problems with it, such as only being able to sync a single catalog. Lightroom CC is The Future, and labeling this one 'Classic' feels like the beginning of the end. At the very least, CC will suck up development resources that might otherwise have gone to Classic.
Adobe has sort of addressed the biggest performance pains. For instance, importing has always been notably slow. So Adobe split the file ingestion aspect of importing from the preview generation to make it seem faster; the thumbnails come in zippily, and you can see the preview generation slogging behind. For a lot of people, that's fine. But I want to start viewing the full-res images while it's still importing, so I need a real speedup. And I was kind of disheartened to read that it's 'working to optimize the performance of higher powered processing systems and higher resolution monitors.' That's probably why the 16-core system with an 8K monitor I tried it on didn't feel as fast as I expected and why using it on a 4K monitor still results in unusably small menu text.
There are more tweaks, but one of the highlights, which is in the updated version of Adobe Camera Raw as well as Lightroom Classic CC, is the new Range Mask. It lets you create a color- or luminance-based mask to limit the area a gradient filter applies to. The implementation is a bit clunky, but it's very effective.
And speaking of 'always'
With that upgrade to Camera Raw 10, Lightroom 6 users (based on ACR 9) get one last new camera codec, for the Nikon D850, before they're cut off from new camera support forever. Two-year-old Lightroom 6 is the last perpetual-license version.
What about Photoshop's cloud integration?
It's..interesting. On Photoshop's opening screen, you can access your cloud-based Lightroom photos. But in this case you can tell they're being pulled down over the network, with a noticeable delay before they open. And like Lightroom CC, there are no indications as to what file format an image is or their file names.
Photoshop does have some useful and whizzy new features
There are also a ton of small and large updates. In addition to some random performance enhancements -- launching and opening local files really does feel faster -- you can change the color and width of paths to improve their visibility, it can open Apple HEIF-compressed files, it adds Microsoft Dial support as a Tech Preview feature (though I couldn't get it to work), improved type support and font management and lots more.
Pixel 3A, the cheap phone Google's needed: No water resistance and no wireless charging, but Google packs the Pixel 3A with the features that matter.
Google Nest Hub Max: A higher-end smart display for Google Assistant joins the Nest family, adds a camera.
Adobe Photoshop Lightroom CC 2018 Download
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