Yes, Adobe Sells a "Photography subscription Plan" where you get LR & PS for about $10 per month. Working photographers, do you consider this plan essential? Any advice along these lines would be appreciated.
Is it worth using the plan in order to have access to more software with continual upgrades, or should I just settle for the stand-alone? I like that you get lightroom and photoshop (including the other stuff) for about the price of lightroom 6 alone, but I'm not sure if she will like the subscriptions going forward into the future. After reviewing the plan, it seems like a fairly good deal in terms of the different applications at your disposal, setting aside the requirement to renew your subscription on an annual basis. I was initially going to purchase Adobe Lightroom 6 as a stand-alone product, but in reading reviews I noticed people pointing out that Adobe is moving to a subscription based model where upgrades after a certain point can only be accessed with the cloud plan.
My significant other is a photographer and she has been needing a software upgrade for quite awhile now so I wanted to do this for her as a Christmas gift. Please direct non-lightroom topics to the most appropriate of the following! This could lead to a Banned.Ĩ- Report accordingly and keep this community clean.ĩ- Posts will be treated on a base by base case and handled accordingly.ġ0- Other Questions/Comments/Suggestion, contact the MODs.
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The synchronization process automatically creates an online version of the Collection which you can view in a web browser and share with other people by sending them the link – they can even share comments.Īny Collections you synchronize are automatically added to online web galleries you can view in a browser and share with other people. The Lightroom Mobile synchronization has an additional advantage. This is one of Lightroom Mobile's limitations – there are many other things you can't do, such as creating virtual copies, adding keywords, applying optical corrections and so on.īut then Lightroom Mobile is designed as a companion to Lightroom desktop, not a replacement, and provided you accept its limitations it really opens up the way you can browse, share and enhance your pictures without having to be at your computer. You can carry on doing this for all the images in the Collection if you want to apply a single preset look quickly and easily. The best you can do at the moment is to create adjustments manually on one image, swipe to the next and tap the 'Previous' button – this applies all the adjustments from the image before. You can also apply presets, though here there is a slight catch – these are designed specifically for Lightroom Mobile and you can't add custom presets of your own in the same way you can on the desktop app.
However, Adobe uses much smaller Smart Previews based on its own DNG format – they're small enough to synchronise but can store all the editing data needed for the full-resolution version on your computer. You can even edit raw files! This sounds like a major technical hurdle because raw files are much larger than JPEGs and would take a long time to synchronise. Synchronized Collections appear automatically in the Lightroom Mobile app.