May 2019 Update for Lightroom Classic, Lightroom, and Adobe Camera Raw
Today, Adobe has released an update for the Lightroom and Adobe Camera Raw family of applications. Before getting into the new features that have been added, it is important to note that Adobe has dropped the “CC” from the names of Lightroom Classic CC and Lightroom CC. This is because all versions of Lightroom are now only available via a Creative Cloud subscription, so there is no need to differentiate the CC version from the perpetual license version. One could make the case that having the “CC” on the end did help differentiate between Lightroom Classic and the cloud-based version of Lightroom, but we’ll have to press on and be specific about which version of Lightroom we are using when discussing with others.
From now on, be prepared to see what was called “Lightroom CC” now called just “Lightroom” in general or if referring to one of the applications within the Lightroom ecosystem, you might see “Lightroom Desktop” (Mac and Windows), “Lightroom Mobile” (iOS and Android), “Lightroom Web” (lightroom.adobe.com), or “Lightroom TV” (Apple TV). All of these are part of what is called the Lightroom ecosystem, as they all reference the same pool of photos and edits stored in the cloud. I’m sure this will take some time for all of us to digest and adjust how we refer to these apps.
Adjusting Texture
In what is sure to be one of the most popular aspects of this update, the new Texture control has been added to Lightroom Classic, the cloud-based Lightroom (Windows, Mac, iOS, Android, and ChromeOS), and the Camera Raw plug-in for Photoshop. You’ll find the Texture control in two places. As a global adjustment, Texture can be found in the Basic panel of Lightroom Classic and Adobe Camera Raw, or in the Effects panel in the cloud-based versions of Lightroom.
It has also been added as a local/selective adjustment to the Graduated Filter, Radial Filter, and Adjustment Brush tools. In Lightroom Classic there is even a new local adjustment preset called, “Soften Skin (Lite)” that sets Texture to -35 and Clarity to -15.
As you might surmise by the name, this control is all about enhancing texture (with a positive Texture value) or reducing the appearance of texture detail (with a negative Texture value).
Texture hones in on medium-sized detail (like the rough surface of the rocks, the jeans, or the leather boots in the first photo) and by doing this can enhance (+) or reduce (-) the appearance of those details with less of an affect on the finer details (like the pores in skin of the second photo) . Experiment with increasing Texture for photos with lots of detail, such as landscape photos, or decreasing texture on portraits. I think you’ll find the greatest level of control using Texture as a local adjustment in conjunction with a Range Mask to further restrict the adjustment to just the area of the photo you want to target.
Edited to add: Max Wendt, the lead engineer on the Texture project, shares some background and detail on the new Texture feature.
Lightroom Classic Only Updates
There are a few updates specific to Lightroom Classic that are worth noting. In regards to tethering, the Canon EOS R is now supported. Adobe also maintains the complete list of tether supported cameras.
There were a series of under-the-hood updates to various aspects of Lightroom Classic to improve overall performance. The text engine in the Book, Print, and Slideshow modules, as well as the Watermark editor has been updated. As has the PDF exporter in Book and Slideshow. Additionally, the video metadata library and SDK for Canon tethering were also updated.
During import from a memory card you should be aware of a change in behavior in the Sources panel. Previously, if a memory card was mounted and the Import window launched, you would see the memory card selected in the Devices section of the Source panel. However, it was determined that performance was improved if the contents of the memory card was selected in the Files section of the Source panel (as if it was just an attached drive instead of a device). Note that the Eject after import checkbox should still be checked by default even when the folder is selected in Files. Give it a try and see if that works better on your system too.
Way back in Lightroom 4 days there was a little-known plug-in on Adobe Labs called the “Adobe DNG Flat Field plug-in” that was intended to assist in the correction of an optical phenomenon called “lens shading” or “lens cast” that more commonly occurs on mirrorless cameras with third-party lenses or even medium format backs on technical cameras. In those cases where the sensor is very close to the back of the lens a situation can occur where asymmetrical vignetting can appear on the photo (and that vignette can also come with a magenta color cast on the right side and green cast on the left). Well, that plug-in has been updated and is now built right into the Library module of Lightroom Classic.
If you have a camera and lens combination that suffers from this problem you can use the new Flat-Field Correction tool to remove the vignetting and color cast. The Flat-Field Correction requires what is called a calibration frame, which is a second photo with the same lighting and lens settings (lens, aperture, focal length, and focusing distance) as the actual photo, but shot through a plastic diffusion card (such as an ExpoDisc® or similar). Then select the calibration frame and the actual photo in the Library module and go to Library > Flat-Field Correction. The tool takes over from there and uses the calibration frame to remove the cast and produce a corrected DNG version of the original photo. Head over to Adobe’s help document on Flat-Field Correction to learn more.
One final note is that the Auto settings function in all of the Lightroom family applications was also updated to improve overall performance.
Cloud-based Lightroom Updates
Some additional features were also added to some members of the Lightroom ecosystem of apps.
Lightroom Mobile (iOS and Android) now have a new Home view that contains some of your most recent photos along with interactive tutorials and inspirational photos. This Home view will eventually get added to Lightroom Desktop too (Windows and Mac). The interactive tutorials provide you direct access to the tutorial photo and then walks you, step-by-step, through each adjustment. I’ve never experienced a tutorial that was more hands-on and interactive than these. While they may benefit beginners the most, I think it can still be a useful exercise to see how other people approach an editing session.
The inspiration section is similar in that we can see what edits have been applied to the photo in question, but it is more from the standpoint of an observer than an interactive edit. Give them a try and you’ll see what I mean. You’ll also notice some familiar instructors like Kristina Sherk, Matt Kloskowski, Terry White, Nicole S. Young, and more, have provided educational and inspirational content in these sections.
While Lightroom Desktop (Windows and Mac) doesn’t yet have the new Home view, Adobe did expand the Help menu (question mark icon in upper-right) to include a search function and access to built-in tutorials.
All of the cloud-based Lightroom apps have access to the new Group Album function, where you can send an invitation to other people that allows them to add photos to that album (and by extension your catalog). To access this new feature, you first need to share the album. In Lightroom Desktop, you can right-click an album and choose Share & Invite where you’ll first need to enable sharing, which creates a link to that album. From there you can configure your settings on the Share & Invite screen. In Lightroom Mobile, tap the three-dot menu next to the album you want to share and tap Share & Invite to access the same controls on the Share & Invite screen.
From the Share & Invite screen you can use the Link Access to control access by invite only or set the album to be viewed by anyone. Use the Invite People screen to enter the email addresses of the people you want to invite to the album, or you can enable Allow Access Request from the Link Settings screen and simply share the generated link with people instead of having to enter everyone’s email address individually.
As with each update, there is also additional support for the raw files from new cameras and new lenses. Adobe also keeps a running list of all updates, known issues, and bug fixes that is worth checking out.
Remember, the updates tend to roll out gradually to all customers, so if you don’t see the update right way, check back later on.
The update has my edits appearing so harsh and over edited. My normal approach to edits no longer matches my brand and I lost previous imported work. I’m pretty upset because I have a gallery to deliver and none of my work is matching now.
It’s like I have to relearn the program and that’s not really great mid-business.
How can I get my previous pics back?
How can I regain a workflow without hours of relearning?
Hi Anita,
I suspect there is something else going on. There is nothing in the latest update that would change the way your photos look.
[…] been able to share galleries/albums with other people for a long time, and back in May 2019 Adobe added in the ability to invite other people to contribute to that shared album via the web. […]
I found this very interesting. Thanks for sharing.
After updating Lightroom Classic, Edit in Photoshop is grayed out. Very frustrated after hours trying to fix this to no avail.
Did you make sure the photo you have selected at the time is online (not stored on a disconnected drive or otherwise offline)?
After updating Lightroom Classic, Edit in Photoshop no longer works. I have spend hours trying to fix this to no avail. Using Windows 10.
After the program is updated, it runs at a much slower
[…] another look. Before going any further, you may want to read through my blog post on the May 2019 updates to Lightroom to better understand the most recent name change Adobe has made to its Lightroom family of […]
[…] taking another look. Before going any further, you may want to read through my blog post on the May 2019 updates to Lightroom to better understand the most recent name change Adobe has made to its Lightroom family of […]
Please help! I went to open LR this morning to work on a project that I need to complete today (and I’m leaving the country in 4 days for 3.5 weeks!) and the LR icon on my main panel (mac) has a big question mark when I click on it!!!! So I proceeded to check for updates, and there was an update, so I loaded it…. restarted my computer two times… nothing happened. LR is not opening from the main panel where all my other programs are…. So I opened it from the Adobe Creative Cloud updates window, and it doesn’t look anything like what I was using before… it’s as if it’s a completely new program… and i don’t recognize anything, nor do I see any of my photos…. Please help! What has happened? (unfortunately I have not backed up my catalogue for a couple of weeks!!)
It sounds like you downloaded the cloud-based Lightroom (formerly Lightroom CC) and not Lightroom Classic. You want to make sure you have Lightroom Classic installed, and open that from the Applications folder.
I have a big problem after the update. My auto tone setting are completely different. I brought in files before the update that were auto toned, reset them and auto toned again and found it is completely different then before in a bad way, the auto tone barely makes a difference. I have screenshot examples of this, anyway to go back to the older update or fix the auto tone settings? Never had a problem with this before, thanks!
Yes, they did make some changes to the algorithm that affect how it adjusts images compared to 8.2. You can roll back to the previous version of Lightroom Classic, see here: https://lightroomkillertips.com/rolling-back-previous-version-lightroom-classic/
After my Lightroom Classic updated yesterday I can no longer export to a specific folder. I get a “folder not writable” message. I’ve tried every suggestion I’ve found so far (change folder settings) and nothing works. My workaround has been to choose save to the original files folder but that adds another step in my workflow. Any clue what I can do to fix this most annoying problem?
Yes, there seems to be a bug affecting some people in that situation. As a workaround for now, in the Export dialog, in the Export Location panel, “select folder later” then configure the rest of the Export dialog as needed. When you click Export you will be prompted to choose the location for the copies. Hope that helps until this is resolved.
Having that problem as well as others. How will we know it is fixed? How will we update the bug removal?
Isabella, I wouldn’t expect a fix until the next official update (historically about every 2 months). When updates are released you will see a notification in the Creative Cloud Application Manager.
[…] post May 2019 Update for Lightroom Classic, Lightroom, and Adobe Camera Raw appeared first on Lightroom Killer […]
So I’m totally lost…I have a stand along LR 6.14 What does all this mean to me?
It doesn’t have any impact on you at all. You can just keep doing what you’ve been doing with what you’ve been doing it with.
Rob,
Are there any specifics on how the Auto Button is different, or is that Trade Secrets?
I have not seen any specifics other than the intention of improving performance.
Any idea how texture is introduced without introducing a new process version? Was it there since 2018 and not enabled or is the slider just adjusting other sliders in the background?
I would assume it worked with PV 5, so no need for a new PV. I have no reason to believe it is adjusting other sliders in the background or that it was laying dormant since Oct 2018.
hello,
texture feature looks nice. not clear the difference with clarity (size of details is different ?)
A pity local HSL is not implemented yet. tedious to set graduated filters outside canevas,… and erase unwanted parts with a brush
luminosity masks remain weak with respect to ON1 photoraw
marc
The engineer behind the Texture slider posted some good background info on its origins. I’ll add the link into my post as well, but here it is: https://theblog.adobe.com/from-the-acr-team-introducing-the-texture-control/
The above link does not work. I found this one working:
https://theblog.adobe.com/creativity/photography/
at least it ended in the same url, but does not work directly for some reason.
I did some testing of the new Texture control v Clarity control by looking at the histograms. Have a look at the blog I wrote halfway down (https://edinburghphotographyworkshop.com/texture-control-in-lightroom-classic/) and it shows how the mid-tones are being enhanced with Texture whereas the Shadows and Highlights also get impacted by Clarity.
I think one of the best changes that wasn’t specifically addressed in this article is that auto tone longer applies negative contrast! I still have to experiment to see if I can apply auto tone on import again, or as I’ve seen recently, we told the images download, the previews are rendered, and then apply auto tone. Otherwise, it’s just applying auto tone to the low-quality in camera JPEG, and not based on the RAW file data.
oop, no longer applies negative contrast…
wait until the images download…
The improvements to watermarking are long overdue… Here’s hoping they’re worthwhile.
Any idea why there still isn’t a profile for the Samsung Galaxy S10.
Sorry, but no idea.