Adobe Lightroom 6

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Adobe has released Lightroom CC 2015.6, Lightroom 6.6, and Camera Raw 9.6, primarily fixing bugs and adding camera profiles as well as Raw support. Lightroom CC and Camera Raw 9.6 users, however, also get a new feature called Guided Upright that reduces/eliminates keystone effects in buildings, straightens images and fixes horizons. Guided Upright adds a semi-automated function to an existing feature, using guides drawn by the user to apply perspective corrections. It's found within a new ‘Transform’ panel, which also houses manual perspective correction sliders. Users manually draw 2 to 4 guide lines on the photo, which the software uses to transform the image via Upright. Those manual perspective correction sliders can be used to ‘fine tune’ the resulting image when necessary.

Lightroom CC empowers you to make amazing photos, from anywhere. It’s the first ever complete photo service made specifically for professional photographers and. Additional Updates in Lightroom CC 2015.6 / 6.6 Merge to Panorama and HDR now works with Smart Previews. Previously, Lightroom required the use of original images for the Merge to Panorama or HDR features. Lightroom CC 2015.6 and Lightroom 6.6 are now available. The goal of this release is to provide additional camera raw support, lens profile support and address bugs that were introduced in previous releases of Lightroom. This release also includes a new Guided Upright feature for Creative Cloud members.

Lightroom CC 2015.6 / 6.6 and Camera Raw 9.6 have added support for the following cameras:. Canon PowerShot G7 X Mark II. Leica M-D (Typ 262). Nikon COOLPIX B700. Panasonic DMC-GX85/GX80/GX7MK2 The software has also added camera matching color profiles for the Pentax K-3 II, K-1, and 645Z cameras. Both versions of Lightroom also received tethered camera support for the Canon EOS-1D X Mark II, Canon EOS 80D, and Canon EOS 1300D / Canon Rebel T6. The full list of new lens profile support in Lightroom 2015.6 / 6.6 is available, and the list for Camera Raw 9.6 lens profile support is available.

I updated to LR CC 2015.6 yesterday. With 2015.5 it rarely used more than 2gb of ram and even then only after I had been using it a lot.

Usually it was between 0.5 and 1.5 gb. With 2015.6 though I am often seeing that it is using more than 3gb of ram. Doing the same kind of work, same size raw files, etc. When I first start 2015.6 it is using about the same as 2015.5 did when it was first started, but after using it awhile it often gets to more than 3gb.

Anyone else seen a dramatic increase in the amount of ram used? As far as I'm aware if you like LR5 you'll like LR6. I find the import process an unnecessary step (C1 has the same), and no favourite folder locations/sources possible (only recent sources), I don't like the dim view of files that are not selected, there's no file size info in the meta data panel (which I find essential to distinguish files). Hate is too strong a word, I should have said dislike.

I just find Adobe Bridge + ACR gives me more, and faster, yes it has a few less features, but then again a few extra, all in all it works more efficiently with my workflow. Personal voyage. Being dissatisfied with Adobe (products/price/performance) I have moved to Capture One. C1 for me is a better application, it's also faster. I have one of those cameras which does not have sensor cleaning built-in, so on occasion, I have to do a deal of de-spotting. In Lightroom, it is so slow and my computer is pretty fast and has stacks of RAM. I just prefer the look to the finished files from Capture One.

Subscription or stand-alone options are clearly present when buying (unlike Adobe). The choice is yours. C1s colour editing tools and masks are far superior than LR and the LCC tool is just amazing. I can't use my 24mm lens in LR without a LOT of work. I never thought it would happen but Adobe, we are divorced. For the first time in 20 years, I have no Adobe products on my computer. Unhappy ex-Adobe customer, happy C1 customer.

Before you troll, if LR floats your boat, hey that's brill! My Adobe boat has sunk! I've now tried Capture One, it was surprisingly similar in terms of workflow to LR, but I found LR / ACR to have the edge on fine detail. C1 seems to add some NR even if I turn all NR off - there's some painterly rounding / smudging of fine detail (only very slight but noticeable to me), and high contrast edges are over-sharpened.

All in all there's nothing to beat LR/ACR.I'd say I'm afraid to say - though I've come from being an advocate of RawShooter, which was incredible - then bought-out by Adobe, and so consumed. I don't like LR and the import workflow, on the other hand Adobe Bridge and ACR is amazing - fast, intuitive, simple, powerful; it works for me, and had the features I need that are lacking in LR.

ACR hasn't had a significant update since V 9.0. And 9.1.1 still runs in PhotoShop CS6. Adobe DNG Coverter works quite well for new cameras. Then one would use ACR 9.1.1. Don't think for a second that people aren' t looking at RawThereapee (freeware) and other organizing software than LR, though LR is not yet subscription only. Affinity just sent out an email saying the beta of the Windows version (right now it's Mac only) should be available this month.

On1 is working raw extraction software for a fall release. My copy of PhotoShop CS6 (and CS5) will be amazing software for years to come. Then there are Mac things like Iridient. Darktable is Mac and Linux. The new Aftershot 3 unfortunately doesn't improve upon V2, but it certainly works.

There's PhotoNinja. There's DXO 11 (though for now it's best to stick with the very good 10).

There's PaintShop. Paint.NET and GIMP both very good freeware options for editing, not raw extraction.

My spite is 3 years worth of reading countless whine posts about Adobe's subscription model. Three years of people saying they're going to move on to something else but never do. I moved to LRCC on my own accord, nobody bent me over.who exactly do you think Adobe forced this upon? I subscribed because it includes Photoshop.

I've been on it for a year now, which has cost me $120, whereas buying a standalone LR/PS combo would've cost me at least $650 (historically speaking, of course). Only photographers will pay exorbitant prices on photography gear and then complain about a $120/year subscription fee for software that can vastly improve their photos. I think it's safe to say that they won't bother unfortunately. You can create your own presets, but you can also either modify the existing profiles to get a shallower curve with DNG Profile Editor or create your own DNG profiles with Xrite or Basic Color tools.

Regarding DNG Profile Editor, you can get the usual Adobe Standard profile back by loading the 5DS(R) Adobe Standard profile and simply changing the curve to 'camera raw default'. Regarding the other, Canon specific profiles, there is no simple solution that I know of to make them look like other Canon cameras specific profiles but I still personally prefer them with the camera raw default curve. Because before the subscriptions, some features came together with the intermediate releases. Now not any longer.

I pay for the major upgrade, and considering the prices before the subscriptions I'm paying more than the subscribers for Lightroom alone (that costed roughly one third of Photoshop, that means circa 3-4$ per month now). I'd like to be considered as who pay monthly.

I don't subscribe because I use a lot InDesign (I have the CS6 Suite, and I never use Illustrator). I should pay a lot every monty for.nothing., since there's really nothing new in InDesign, but I should have to pay for it anyway. It's just a small detail, but I really like the magnifying loupe in the new guided upright tool.

It allows me to remain in fit view mode, which makes sense given that I'm trying to transform the whole picture, while allowing very precise positioning of the target. In C1 I'd sometimes feel the need to zoom in and out several times to adjust the target, particularly on small monitors (unless I'm missing something?). That's my positive comment about something from Adobe for the year 2016. Now I can get back to mindless bickering. Some want fast. Others want good. I am not a facebook photographer.

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Look at the adobe support forums. They are FULL with complains about lightroom being slow as a snail. Photo ninja is not the fastest raw converter sure. But it´s output is better than lightrooms. Adobe is focusing on amateurs lately. The social media crowd.

Just look at that stupid new import dialog they introduced a few point releases ago. No pro wants such crap. Putting more mobile feature in LR won´t help the professionals or enthusiasts.

Adobe has to work on the core features. DxO OP 10 Elite is MUCH faster than 9 when applying PRIME NR. The new 11 is reputed to be 2-4 times faster than 10. And, there are two kinds of 'speed'. One is the time required for user intervention, the other is processing time. I find DxO super-efficient in terms of setting adjustments.

For my high-ISO event images shot with MFT, a custom preset works really well on the vast majority of my images, requiring very little intervention on my part. Processing in 10 takes about 1 minute per image on my 13' MBP, so if I have to output 300 JPEGs from an awards dinner for delivery to a client, I just let the export happen overnight.

As for LR speed, when I import several hundred RAWs, I have to walk away for an hour while LR builds previews before I can get to work. With Aperture, I could start culling even before the import finished. I'm an Aperture immigrant to LR, and much as I love some of the tools (HDR & pano, yea!), LR is slower and less efficient at the front end of the workflow. Jacques Cornell: I just tired DXO 11, it is still a bit better than ACR 9.x for higher ISO NR (though not with NEF files I find). Now, the is a huge flaw in DXO 11, when you open a file and extract it with DX0 11, an NEF by way of example but not only NEF, the software as it installs alters the raw NEF, and makes it so one can no longer open the raw with ACR/PhotoShop. I don't remember DXO 9 or 10 pulling this garbage.

I didn't look around for some tweak, nor did I try reinstalling the software, I reverted out of that mess, and said to myself 'glad that was trialware, if I were to ever consider a purchase, this can't be a thing, so more testing is in order.' Bridge is much faster than Lightroom, and so is CaptureOne.

Designed as a comprehensive solution for organizing, editing, and exporting photos, Photoshop Lightroom 6 from Adobe is an all-inclusive, non-destructive environment suitable for all aspects of post-production. Seeing enhancements in performance and range of features, the sixth edition of Lightroom includes a pair of Merge modes, HDR and Panorama, for seamlessly compositing multiple images together to increase dynamic range or the overall field of view of photographs, respectively. Facial Recognition technology is now employed to help organize and access your photos of people quickly, and overall updates to the performance of the program accelerate processing and enhancement speeds.

Rounding out the post-production workflow, this edition of Lightroom also allows you to create advanced video slideshows of your imagery and produce HTML5-compatible web galleries for sharing your work in more dynamic ways. The range of features unique to Lightroom 6 serve to complement the already impressive set of tools found in previous iterations of Lightroom, including Smart Previews for working with your photos while offline from your library, rich metadata editing capabilities, Develop presets for applying one-click effects to imagery, an Advanced Healing Brush for intelligently retouching photos, and a wide assortment of sharing and exporting options. Lightroom 6 is compatible with both Mac and Windows operating systems. After purchasing this download version, an email will be sent to you containing a unique serial code for retrieving, activating, and validating your software. Unique Features for Lightroom 6 Editing, Sharing, and Performance Enhancements. HDR Merge is a seamless means for compositing multiple exposures within a single frame in order to achieve an extended dynamic range with greater shadow and highlight detail. This tool helps to align sequentially recorded frames and average the exposure values from each to produce natural or surreal effects.

Panorama Merge aids in stitching together several files, including raw images, in order to create wide field of view panoramas. This tool helps to maintain a high degree of detail and prevent unwanted distortions and gaps or overlaps between frames.

Facial Recognition is a unique solution for sourcing photos of specific people without the use of metadata, tags, or keywords. Organize and Work Efficiently Smart Previews Smart Previews permits working with your imagery without having to bring your entire image library with you. By generating smaller, more portable stand-in files of your full-size imagery, you can apply adjustments and update metadata and then automatically apply these edits to the larger originals at a later time.

Develop Presets Develop settings can be saved as presets for instantly applying your favorite looks to photos with a single click. In addition to creating your own, dozens of presets are pre-installed and thousands more are available from third parties. Other Features. Location-based photo organization. Import libraries from other software applications. Extended video editing support.

Image watermarking. Cross-platform 64-bit support.

Multiple monitor support. Offline photo management. Batch application of development settings. Adobe Photoshop integration.

Manage and refine several images at once. DNG and raw file conversion. Single or group metadata stamping. File renaming.

Advanced search and sort. Simple or customized keywording. IPTC/EXIF/XMP metadata editing. Import and export presets.

Metadata stamp on import. Advanced Editing Capabilities Advanced Healing Brush The Advanced Healing Brush can be used to quickly fix image defects, such as dust or spots, as well as cleanly remove any unwanted objects within the photo. Updated control allows you to quickly remove oddly-shaped items, such as threads or splotches, without affecting the main subjects of an image. Upright Upright allows you to straighten tilted images with a single click by analyzing and detecting skewed horizontal and vertical lines. This function works even when the horizon line is obscured or hidden.

Radial Gradient The Radial Gradient tool enables you to create off-center vignette effects or multiple vignetted areas within a single image for easily drawing attention to specific portions of the frame. Non-Destructive Environment Lightroom is based within a non-destructive editing environment that lets you experiment and adjust imagery without the fear of accidentally altering your original files.

This makes it easier to reverse any unwanted edits or save multiple versions of the same image. Advanced Black and White Conversion When converting color images to grayscale, eight color channels can be used to gain complete control over tonal representation, as well as contrast and brightness. Other Features. Highlight and shadow recovery. White balance brush. Additional adjustment brush options.

Advanced noise reduction. Film grain simulation.

Lens correction. Perspective correction and crop. Selective editing brush.

Lightroom

Tracking of editing adjustments. Before-and-after comparisons.

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Simplified tone curve tools. Hue, saturation, and luminance editing. Intelligent sharpening. Dust-busting. Red-eye removal. Effortless Sharing and Exporting Photo Book Creation A variety of drag-and-drop, pre-designed book templates are available for streamlined creation of printed photo publications. Each of the templates can be edited for a more personalized look, and then uploaded to printing servers directly from Lightroom.

Online Sharing Integration Photos can be shared directly to social media and photo sharing websites, such as Facebook and Flickr, from within the Lightroom interface. With select sites, online comments to your images can also be displayed within the Lightroom library alongside your files. Other Features. Soft proofing for printing applications.

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Direct email support. Customizable print packages.

Flexible and versatile online publishing directly from Lightroom. HTML or Flash web gallery output.

One-click publishing to your website.