The revamped Photography plan includes CC, Classic and Photoshop, but only 20GB of cloud storage. The Lightroom CC plan includes only that app with a whopping 1TB of cloud storage. There are now two versions of the 10 per month Photography pack. In the meantime, photographers have four options. Take the instructions for exporting your presets to Lightroom CC, which suggest you can move rather than copy them from the Classic folder "when the presets are no longer needed in Lightroom Classic CC". The "Classic" designation is not the kind of label you put on a product with a long-term future and some of the Adobe support materials hint at a future without Classic. So what's Adobe's game plan with Lightroom CC? As much as Adobe protests it has no plans to do away with Lightroom Classic, we simply don't believe it. 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. Enter a search 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. There is one very good feature that is unique to Lightroom CC: search. Although we did encounter one or two delayed syncs when we tweaked a photo in CC and then opened Classic, which doesn't bode well. You could twiddle with photos on your smartphone in between shoots, for example, and have them synced and waiting for you when you get home to your PC. 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 can use Lightroom Classic in conjunction with the new CC app and get the best of both worlds. To be fair to Adobe, this isn't an either/or scenario. Nothing like the vast array of export options you get with Classic.
your options are save it to JPG in one of three preset sizes. And once you've finished editing a photo and want to "export" it, well.
LIGHTROOM CC REVIEWS SKIN
Adjustment brush presets such as dodge, burn, soften skin or teeth whitening are no more - you're merely left to adjust the various exposure, highlights, whites and blacks sliders manually. The handy histogram revealing where highlights and shadows have been clipped is gone. Advanced controls such as split toning have gone AWOL.
LIGHTROOM CC REVIEWS PATCH
Lightroom CC's editing tools are not a patch on those in Classic, either. Nothing is imported automatically - all you get is the pared back selection of presets that comes with Lightroom CC. If you've carefully curated a library of presets over the years, you'll have to manually copy those over to Lightroom CC too.