This boasts some useful tools such as an animated spirit level that shows you if you’re composing a shot with a tilted horizon. The iOS version of Lightroom is almost identical to the desktop version with one key addition – the iOS Lightroom app has a camera built into it. You can now create a mask on one photo and apply it to another, which is a great time saver. Masking tools give you decent selective adjustment control. Both updated versions of Lightroom now let you create masks based on properties such as Color, Luminance and even Depth (and adjust the range of these properties to fine-tune the selection). With help from AI you can create a mask to selectively adjust a complex shape such as a person (or their background). Thanks to the updates to both versions of Lightroom you can now invert masks in a tap/click of an icon. This enables you to master complex tools quickly, such as using gradient masks to selectively darken an overexposed sky without underexposing the foreground landscape. You can then follow step-by-step instructions that highlight the appropriate tools within Lightroom’s workspace and how and where to apply them to a photo. Tap (or click) the Learn tab and choose a tutorial such as 'Emphasise Your Subjects Using Masks'. One of Lightroom's key strengths is supporting tutorials that you can access and follow from within the app. Lightroom Classic offers links to online video tutorials that show you how to use its various modules. Lightroom also provides Adaptive (machine learning) presets to analyse a photo’s contents and then provide you with a host of one tap/click looks that should suit your shot. You can also adjust the strength of Lightroom’s presets to produce stronger or more subtle changes. There are now also presets for video footage and you can trim your video clips and edit their look within Lightroom. Upgrades have added more for videographers. Both versions of Lightroom boast over 200 Premium presets that are broken down into helpful categories such as Style: Cinematic or Subject: Landscape. Why is this happening? Why the LR can't work out of the box and what needs to be done?Īs mentioned before the MBP is brand new and I didn't install any other app besides Creative Cloud & LR/PS.Photographers can enjoy using filters or presets to adjust colours and tones in a tap or a click, but inbuilt apps often have a disappointing number – Apple’s Photos app only has a rather measly nine filters to experiment with, for example. You can't imagine how frustrated I am because as a professional that's my business and 2 days in a row I can't work. (I'm on Mojave and I get the error that I'm not allowed to change permissions). Tried to change permissions and add Admin on /Library with no luck. Uninstall and Install again (tried the CC tool to clean all Adobe files) This happened every single time I opened the app. My problem is that every time I open LR CC it loads normally and after 15 seconds it crashes and quits. The MacBook Pro is on Mojave 10.14.3 and of course the LR/PS are the latest available from Adobe. Hi all! I just bought a MacBook Pro 2018 13" and as a professional photographer I installed PS and Lightroom Classic CC via Creative Cloud desktop app.
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