I, however, only use CC temporarily (while traveling or to have a small collection of images accessible at all times). Even if you remove the collection or stop syncing the collection, those files will forever remain in the cloud. But I will be moving from Pennsylvania to Oregon, and my desktop will probably be in storage for 3 or more months, so I wanted something that would work in the interim..
Or do you have a solution?When I was in Prague, I took BOTH my iPad Pro AND iPad Pro 12.9″ with 512GB storage as this was all that I could get here in Kyrgyzstan. I haven’t figured out how Lightroom CC will do that on iPad. I have a 2010 mid-year model of a MacBook Pro. You can get a pop-up with a list of keyboard shortcuts by simply holding down the ‘cmd’ button in any application you’re working in.Once you have finished making your edits, it is fairly straightforward to export to your preferred cloud drive, Apple Photos, or social media. Ultimately, once again, can a IPad Pro handle both Lr and Ps? This is not limited to 15 images as with the export feature. But, that SD card worked right away in Prague as if the digital demons left me alone for a while. If you open this post on your iPad, the following link should take you straight to the Lightroom app in the App Store on your iPad: Currently I'm switching to even more mobile work - to iPad Pro. I used a trial period to do this, but I failed. My Setup. Regards.Interested in hiring influencers to advertise your services?You are invited to join the premium global influencer network that connects brands with Instagram influencers proven to attract engaged traffic, amplified brand exposure and loyal clients.This agency supplies exclusive access to dozens of influencers in many niches that you can collaborate with for sponsored posts to advertise your business and watch them turn your brand into a viral topic.You will receive full access to a directory of authentic influencers and advanced analytic tools to examine influencer engagement and performance. I honestly didn’t think much of the iPad Pro when it was initially announced on stage in late October. You can also load photos onto the iPad via Apple's camera connection kit, and then load them into the Lightroom app if you want. And if I can spend some of that time organizing my images, then I’ll gladly use my time that way.I realize this is a Lightroom/iPad topic, but since you also tout ON1, is there a similar process with ON1/iPad?ON1 has an iPad app (only for browsing images, I believe), but it hasn’t been updated since November 2017. Well, I took it all with me anyway. Importing all my raw images into Apple Photo they are all blurry when opening the file. Just another option!Nicole,your posts always challenges me to try something new! I can see I can do one by one by copying and pasting, but it’s too time consuming when on a deadline.
Thanks again!Question: Other than performance, is there anything herein that requires an iPad Pro (as opposed to an iPad amateur)?Note: In theory, when iPadOS (iOS 13) comes out (September sometime? After finding familiar tools such as tone curves and split toning, you’ll notice that most of the basic tools are laid out similarly to the desktop version of LR Classic.You can easily move sliders with your finger to make edits as usual. I will discuss in detail my basic workflow, as well as share some images I’ve edited using LR CC.Before I begin, I will tell you that I’m not a full-time photographer, and, therefore, I am not culling through thousands of images every week as a professional photographer might do. I tried to make an edit to one of the photos that is inside the hard drive folder and the edits seem to be syncing to the Synced Collections, and vice versa.Once I’ve moved the photos to my external hard drive, how do I make sure that when I delete the Synced Collections (to make up for more space), it doesn’t delete the photo from my external hard drive?I think that once the photos are moved out of the normal “Lr mobile” synced location (such as, to an external HD), they are no longer the original photos from your mobile app. Here, the processing power of the iPad Pro really shines, as it loads RAW images (50 MB per file) without any issues or hesitation. You now also get the star ratings found in Lightroom for desktop and other iPad apps. I have made the change as well. Yes this workflow works similarly on nearly all devices.Good article, however, I prefer not to take either a laptop or an iPad and wait until I get home to download and edit my images.Another great job, Nicole. But it took a bit to arrive to that conclusion, so here's a quick breakdown of the considerations.For context, here is my photo management system on desktop:This workflow doesn’t work for the iPad for one simple reason: the iPad doesn’t support external drives.
A side-swipeable bar across the bottom of the screen offers many of Lightroom's old standby adjustments—white balance, temperature, tint, auto tone (I like that this one is prominently in the center), exposure, contrast, highlights, shadows, whites, blacks, clarity, vibrance, and saturation.A new icon that looks like a camera aperture opens a menu that adds several more important editing tools, including Tone Curves, Vignetting, Split Toning, Color/B&W, Dehaze, and Lens Correction. There’s also the option to pay $9.99 USD ($13.55 CAD) per month for access to just Photoshop and Lightroom, Source: Adobe Adobe's Lightroom for iPad is a full-featured photo-editing app that syncs with Lightroom on the desktop, and delivers a surprising number of photo-correction tools.Adobe's Lightroom for iPad is a full-featured photo-editing app that syncs with Lightroom on the desktop, and delivers a surprising number of photo-correction tools.Specifically, you can use Lightroom on the iPad on its own for some of its editing options, but you'll need a Creative Cloud account to such capabilities as raw support and local adjustments. And ultimately I decided that my laptop was going to stay home.I’ve always found laptops to be ridiculously cumbersome when traveling. This is an important decision only because RAW files are notoriously large and will not only take time to upload to the cloud, but will quickly eat up storage space.In the end, I decided to store my RAWs on iCloud via the Photos app.