Lightroom Photo
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Lightroom desktop lets you easily merge multiple exposure-bracketed photos into a single HDR photo and standard exposure photos into a panorama. Moreover, you can also merge multiple exposure-bracketed photos (with consistent exposure offsets) to create an HDR panorama in one step.
HDR photos are used to capture scenes having a large dynamic range. However, using more number of photos can lead to unwanted artifacts from poor alignment or ghosting. For optimal HDR merge, the aim is to capture photos in a manner that each part of the scene is well-exposed, that is neither blown-out nor under-exposed in at least one of the photos.
Command-click (macOS) or Control-click (Windows) to select multiple exposure bracketed source photos when in Photo Grid () view or Square Grid () view, or from the filmstrip appearing at the bottom when in Detail () view.
Once you've finished making your choices, click Merge to create the HDR image. By default, a stack containing your source files and the merged photo is created, with the merged HDR photo visible on the top of the stack. A suffix HDR.dng is appended to the filename of the merged photo.
Command-click (macOS) or Control-click (Windows) to select a series of standard exposure source photos when in Photo Grid () view or Square Grid () view, or from the filmstrip appearing at the bottom when in Detail () view.
Projects the panorama as if it were mapped to a flat surface. Since this mode keeps straight lines straight, it is great for architectural photography. Really wide panoramas may not work well with this mode due to excessive distortion near the edges of the resulting panorama.
You can use Boundary Warp slider setting to warp panoramas to fill the canvas. Use this setting to preserve photo details near the boundary of the merged photo, that may otherwise be lost due to cropping. The slider controls how much Boundary Warp to apply.
Once you've finished making your choices, click Merge to create the panorama photo. By default, a stack containing your source files and the merged photo is created, with the merged panorama visible on the top of the stack. A suffix Pano.dng is appended to the filename of the merged photo.
Command-click (macOS) or Control-click (Windows) to select a series of consistent multiple exposure bracketed source photos when in Photo Grid () view or Square Grid () view, or from the filmstrip appearing at the bottom when in Detail () view.
You can use Boundary Warp slider setting to warp HDR panoramas to fill the canvas. Use this setting to preserve photo details near the boundary of the merged photo, that may otherwise be lost due to cropping. The slider controls how much Boundary Warp to apply.
Once you've finished making your choices, click Merge to create the HDR panorama photo in a single step. By default, a stack containing your source files and the merged photo is created, with the merged HDR panorama visible on the top of the stack. A suffix HDRPano.dng is appended to the filename of the merged photo.
To successfully merge your selection of photos to an HDR panorama, ensure that all the requirements listed below are met. If any of these requirements are not met, Lightroom displays the Unable to create HDR Panorama dialog box with a message 'Unable to create an HDR Panorama with your selection. Attempt to create a normal panorama instead' when you try to merge the photos.
Lightroom is a powerful service for editing your photos, organizing them into albums, and sharing them with others. Open photos in Photoshop from Lightroom to perform advanced editing or retouching such as creating composites by combining parts of multiple photos into one, adding graphics or text, or using your photos in other creative projects.
Open your Lightroom-edited photo in Photoshop to combine it with other images or graphics, retouch parts of the image, remove unwanted elements, apply text, or other advanced edits. When you save your work in Photoshop, the updated image automatically appears in Lightroom and your original version is saved.
Open a photo in Photoshop directly from Lightroom on your desktop. Right click a photo and choose Edit in Photoshop. Or, open the editing panel on the right, then click the ellipses to display the Edit in Photoshop option.
Lightroom Classic gives you all the desktop editing tools you need to bring out the best in your photos. Punch up colors, make dull-looking shots vibrant, remove distracting objects, and straighten skewed shots. Easily organize all your photos on your desktop and share them in a variety of ways.
SAN JOSE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Today, Adobe (Nasdaq:ADBE) announced that Samsung Galaxy S23 series smartphones globally will use Adobe Lightroom as the exclusive default photo editor for RAW photos taken with the Expert RAW app. The Expert RAW app, available exclusively on Samsung Galaxy, enables DSLR-style image shooting and editing in RAW and JPEG. Once downloaded, Expert RAW app functionality can also be accessed through the native Camera app on the Galaxy S23 series. For an enhanced Galaxy ecosystem experience, Samsung Galaxy Book3 Ultra and Pro series PCs will automatically transfer Expert RAW images from Galaxy S23 series devices, and allow users to edit images on Adobe Lightroom for professional-level results.
When supported Canon or Nikon digital cameras are connected to the computer, you can import photos directly into a Lightroom Classic catalog. You can bypass the camera's capture software and import directly from a camera.
Select this option if you don't want Lightroom Classic to automatically select the most recently captured photo. Deselect this option to display the most recently captured photo in the preview area.
Quickly remove tough spots and fill the selection with sampled content from other parts of the photo. Content-Aware Remove tool in the Healing panel provides an ultimate editing experience to achieve unimagined editing control.
Enhance your photos by making selective adjustments to people and objects using the Masking tool. Select People and Select Object lets you edit parts of the skin and multiple objects in a photo using precise masking selections.
To sync Lightroom Classic photos with Adobe Photoshop Lightroom apps, the photographs must be in synced collections or in All Synced Photographs collection . Photos within a synced Collection are automatically available in Lightroom on your desktop, mobile, and web. For more information on collections, see Work with photo collections.
In the Lightroom Sync tab of the Preferences dialog box, you can specify the settings for syncing photos between Lightroom Classic and Lightroom ecosystem of apps. To access the sync preferences in Lightroom Classic, choose Edit (Win)/Lightroom Classic (Mac) menu > Preferences > Lightroom Sync tab.
Delete All Synced Data removes all the image data and synced information from Creative Cloud, including previews, metadata, and develop settings. Original photos stored on your computer aren't affected. All the collections are also preserved, but their sync settings are reset.
Click the play button on an edited photo to browse through the edits one by one, and find out how the photographer went from original capture to final image. You can also use the Edits tab on the right for a list of all the applied edits and select specific ones to see how the image is changing, while the Info tab gives you information about the file type and metadata.
Recommended Presets are sourced from the Lightroom community. Using machine learning developed by Adobe, Recommended Presets shows you how photographers processed similar images to yours and allows you to see how that processing would look on your own images.
To find just the right content in the Discover section, you can now search for specific topics and photographers in the search bar and filter your results based on subject matter, post remixability (see below to learn about Remixes), and preset availability.
Sharing a group of photos is just as easy. Open an album, tap the share icon, and select Share. Tap individual thumbnails, or swipe across them, to select multiple photos. Tap the gear icon and choose to share the photos with or without metadata. Then, tap the check mark and choose the appropriate image size before sharing your photos in a text message, email, or on social media.
The photos you take for a client, portfolio, or album are likely combined in an album. Open the album, tap the share icon, select Share Album, then tap Share. Choose View on the Web to open the album in Lightroom on the web. Or, choose Share Link to copy a URL you can send in a text message, email, or on social media.
You may want to store your photos on your phone or tablet for later use. Open an album and tap the share icon. Choose Save to Camera Roll and select one or more images. Tap the check mark, and choose the appropriate image size. The selected photos automatically save to your device.
When you want to edit a photo on your mobile device, you can easily send it to another app. Open an album and tap the share icon. Select Open In, or Edit In, and tap to select an image. Then, tap the check mark and choose the appropriate image size before selecting one of the available apps on your phone such as Photoshop Fix, Photoshop Mix, VSCO, or Instagram.
With a Creative Cloud Photography plan subscription, or a trial, you get access to Lightroom for your desktop. Install Lightroom on all of your devices to see your synced photos and edits from anywhere.
Lightroom offers many ways to organize your photos. You can manage your photos as albums or stacks; or organize them using keywords, metadata, flags, and ratings. Easily find and filter photos in Lightroom desktop.
Starting with Lightroom desktop (version 2.3), when you launch the application for the first time, you can view the Help icon highlighted at the upper-right corner. Click the Help icon to access the Contextual Help menu. The first sectio