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Adobe Lightroom CC

A thinly veiled attempt to turn photograph­ers into monthly subscriber­s, but it’s too lightweigh­t

- BARRY COLLINS

Lightroom CC might prove to be the straw that broke the camel’s back. Having shoved its reluctant Creative Suite customers onto a monthly subscripti­on plan, Adobe is now trying to do the same to photograph­ers – by taking their photo collection­s hostage.

Lightroom is practicall­y a staple amongst photograph­y enthusiast­s and profession­als, despite Adobe allowing the applicatio­n to stagnate over the past few years. Meaningful updates have been few and far between and performanc­e has grown stodgy. Now we know why: Adobe has been working on a new app.

Lightroom CC is effectivel­y a cloud version of Lightroom – with the desktop original now ominously rebranded Lightroom Classic CC. It’s more akin to the mobile/tablet apps that have been on iOS and Android for some time than the full-blown desktop app, and that’s reflected it in its trimmed-back feature set.

The key difference is Lightroom CC wants nothing to do with your local photo collection. You can import an old-school Lightroom catalogue into Lightroom CC, but those photos will be sucked up to Adobe’s cloud. Depending on the plan you choose, Adobe is offering photograph­ers up to 1TB of cloud storage, an indication that it wants you to smash all your photos onto its servers – although even 1TB will likely prove insufficie­nt for most photograph­ers’ collection­s.

If you’ve carefully curated a library of presets over the years, you’ll have to manually copy those over to Lightroom CC too. Nothing is imported automatica­lly – all you get is the pared-back selection of presets that comes with Lightroom CC.

Lightroom CC’s editing tools aren’t a patch on those in Classic, either. Advanced controls such as split toning have gone AWOL. The handy histogram revealing where highlights and shadows have been clipped is gone. Adjustment brush presets such us dodge, burn, soften skin and teeth whitening are no more – you’re merely left to adjust the various exposure, highlights, whites and blacks sliders manually. And once you’ve finished editing a photo and want to “export” it, well… your options are save it to JPG in one of three preset sizes. Nothing like the vast array of export options you get with Classic.

To be fair to Adobe, this isn’t an either/or scenario. You can use Lightroom Classic in conjunctio­n with the new CC app and get the best of both worlds. You can sync a Classic Collection with “Lightroom Mobile” and have those photos available to edit in CC, be that on the desktop, mobile or tablets. You could twiddle with

“Lightroom CC is more akin to the mobile apps that have been on iOS and Android than the full-blown desktop app”

photos on your smartphone in between shoots, for example, and have them synced and waiting for you when you get home to your PC. That said, I did encounter one or two delayed syncs when I tweaked a photo in CC and then opened Classic, which doesn’t bode well.

There is one very good feature that is unique to Lightroom CC: search. Enter a term such as “dog”, “car”, “red” or “boy” and Lightroom CC does a pretty impressive job of sorting through your collection, without any need to tag the photos with those particular attributes first. If you were hunting through your collection to find a specific photo for a client, that could prove to be a belter of a feature.

So what’s the game plan? Much as Adobe protests it has no plans to do away with Lightroom Classic, I don’t believe it. The “Classic” designatio­n is not the kind of label you put on a product with a long-term future.

In the meantime, photograph­ers have four options. There are now two versions of the £10-per-month Photograph­y pack. The Lightroom CC plan includes only that app with 1TB of cloud storage. The revamped Photograph­y plan includes CC, Classic and Photoshop, but only 20GB of cloud storage. Or £20 per month buys all the apps and 1TB of storage. Full £50 Creative Cloud subscriber­s also get all the apps, but only receive 100GB of storage – a needless kick in the teeth.

Can I see myself moving to Lightroom CC only? Not a chance. Uploading batches of hundreds of RAW files to the cloud is painful, the editing tools are too basic, and I’d rather have my photo collection where I can physically touch it. Will Adobe deprive me of that choice eventually? I’d bet my mortgage on it.

 ??  ?? LEFT The search capability is great – hunt for “cars” and you’ll see something like this
LEFT The search capability is great – hunt for “cars” and you’ll see something like this
 ??  ?? ABOVE Lightroom CC’s editing tools are a pale imitation of those found in Classic
ABOVE Lightroom CC’s editing tools are a pale imitation of those found in Classic

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