![]() ![]() This is a very useful feature which Lightroom does not currently have. In addition, Lightroom Classic supports 'Virtual Copies' you can create multiple versions of the same image, each with its own thumbnail, for saving and easily comparing different 'looks'. But Classic’s strength lies in its ease of use when batch processing synchronising edits across hundreds of images is quick and painless and allows only select changes to be synchronised between files. Red eye removal, and a few Calibration options seem to be the most that separate the editing tools between the two softwares. There are only a few extras that might be of use to professionals. ![]() Lightroom Classic matches Lightroom’s tools and improves on them but, surprisingly, not by much. However, you have to choose one version for the image thumbnail so the others are effectively hidden until you select and view the image. Lightroom also supports 'versions' within images so that you can try out and save different 'looks'. Other tools in Lightroom include crop and rotate, a healing brush, normal brush, linear and radial gradients, and options for keywording or synchronising edits across images. Changes to lighting, colour, effects such as texture and clarity, and detail sharpening or noise reduction, as well as optics and geometry editing is available under the Edit option. Image Profiles can be switched between for the best starting-point when it comes to contrast, colour, and levels. (Image credit: Jason Parnell-Brookes)īeing the more streamlined of the two, Lightroom has a noticeably pared down tool set but still gives editors plenty of power when it comes to making changes to images. With comparable editing tools, this is where the two versions of Lightroom are most similar. Either way, there’s a 7 day free trial for Adobe software so you can try before you buy. Users that simply require an image editor that synchronises across devices and is available on-hand might opt for the Lightroom plan, whereas anyone considering layers based image editing, or who want the extra features and tools associated with professional-level editing should take the other two bundle packages into account. Additional storage can be added and is organised into: 2TB, 5TB, or 10TB, starting at $9.99/£9.98/month per terabyte. But it does have Lightroom Mobile thrown in for good measure. However, the Lightroom Plan (1TB) is $9.99/£9.98/month and offers the same amount of storage but only includes Lightroom, and not Photoshop or Lightroom Classic. The Photography Plan (1TB) is exactly the same but ups the standard 20GB of Cloud storage to 1TB and rings in at $19.99/£19.97/month. This includes Lightroom mobile, Photoshop on the iPad and 20GB of Cloud storage space. ![]() To purchase the Photography Plan (20GB) it’ll cost $9.99/£9.98/month and it comes with Lightroom, Lightroom Classic and Photoshop. Two versions bundle together Lightroom, Lightroom Classic and Photoshop but there’s only one option that provides Lightroom as an individual purchase. There are currently three photography packages for purchasing Lightroom via Adobe’s Creative Cloud. Personally, I think it's the best choice.There are three package options for purchasing Lightroom and Lightroom Classic. The Adobe photography package gives you all of these and includes a lot of cloud storage. Photoshop is the leading general-purpose editor which brings lots of sophisticated editing capabilities including layers and lots of AI functions like sky replacement and neural filters. Not quite the same capabilities as the other two but still pretty good. Then there is Lightroom which is cloud-based and does almost the same as Classic except it runs and stores everything in the cloud.Īnd finally, there is Lightroom Mobile which as the name suggests runs on mobile phones. It allows you to store your files locally and in the cloud. It has a very easy-to-learn user interface. It provides pretty much all the editing capabilities an average photographer needs. It is very much geared toward allowing users to organise their photo collections and do things like keywording (tagging) to let users do a sophisticated search of their catalogues. Lightroom Classic is the original version that runs on your desktop. ![]()
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