This isn’t an easy question to answer right now. Lacking in Lightroom is the ease of adding text or other multimedia elements, so Apple Keynote or Microsoft PowerPoint might still have the edge. New features include the famed “Ken Burns” zooming effect and the ability to synchronize images to music cues. You can even retrieve previously used keywords by holding down the shift key, rather than having to type it in again or refer to the Keyword List.įor those underwater photographers who enjoy making slideshows of their latest adventures, Lightroom 6 comes with a much-improved Slideshow Module. The new painter tool allows you to go through your library and “paint” each image with a keyword just with a click. Keeping up with your keywords in an image library can be a challenge, having to go through and label each “keeper” image. A nice new feature, which only adds to the speed, is the ability to automatically import your images directly into a specific collection. Plus, Lightroom now automatically sizes preview images to fit your screen size. How fast? I was able to import 400-plus images on an 8GB card in under six minutes. Importing even large batches of RAW images into your Lightroom Creative Cloud Library is quite fast. Organization with Lightroom Creative Cloud Previously, you’d have to go into Photoshop or another program to merge the images, before bringing them back into Lightroom.
That’s why it’s handy that Adobe has included RAW editing for panorama images and HDR in Lightroom. While combining multiple images for panoramas or HDR is relatively rare in underwater photography, we do (sometimes) dabble in topside photography where such techniques are desirable. For example, if you’ve used a gradient filter at the top of the image to reduce exposure, and it overlaps with an element you want to remain at its original exposure, the brush tool will allow you to selectively erase that (or any) section of the mask.
The only real major new tool with underwater application is a brush that allows users to selectively edit different parts of an image mask with radial and gradient filters. And while you probably won’t be taking too many HDR images underwater, it’s nice to have it right there when needed for topside use. The major improvement comes in the addition of Photo Merge, which allows users to easily create panoramas and HDR images by combining multiple photos. Having said that, there aren’t many significant changes to be found here, at least for underwater photography. Other than the image library, most underwater photographers will spend the majority of their time editing individual images in the Develop section. The latest version, utilizing the GPU, is far more reactive-with changes appearing almost instantly after they are made in the Develop section. In previous editions of Lightroom, there was a noticeable lag between when adjustments are made and when they are rendered in the preview image. I’ve been left waiting for minutes while Bridge loads up thumbnails of 300 RAW files.
Having been using Adobe Bridge and the previous version of Lightroom to load thumbnail previews, the speed at which Lightroom generates large thumbnail previews of RAW images is impressive. In fact, Adobe claims that the speed will increase by 1000% in some computers.įor me, the increased speed is most notable in two instances: generating preview thumbnails and seeing changes (almost instantly) while editing. Thus, the switch to using GPU has dramatically increased Lightroom’s speed in rendering images during the edit process. While the CPU is made up of only a few core processors, your computer’s GPU is constructed from thousands of smaller cores, designed to handle multiple tasks at the same time, more efficiently. Previous editions of Lightroom relied on the computer’s central processing unit (or CPU). Perhaps the biggest change from previous versions of Lightroom comes with the program’s utilization of your computer’s graphics processing unit (or GPU) to render adjustments made while editing.
#ADOBE LIGHTROOM CLOUD SOFTWARE#
Acquired through Adobe’s Creative Cloud, the program is known as Lightroom CC, while sold as a standalone as “Lightroom 6.” Either way, this latest version of Adobe’s image editing and organization software features a host of improvements and new features, especially for the underwater photographer, so let’s dive right in. Just to get this technicality out of the way, Lightroom 6 and Lightroom CC are the exact same program, just titled differently. And now, Adobe has unveiled Lightroom 6 and Lightroom Creative Cloud.
Just a few weeks ago, Apple released the replacement for iPhoto/Aperture in the form of Photos OSX. It’s been quite the month for image editing software.