Lightroom Adobe Rgb

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Nguyet Edmondson

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Jul 24, 2024, 10:29:40 AMJul 24
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If you are referring to Lightroom CC (the cloud-based version), and if you imported your images using that version of Lightroom, then the images are stored in the cloud. Depending on how you had that version configured on the old computer, it is possible that copies were also being stored on the hard drive of the old computer. But I don't know how you had Lightroom CC configured on the old computer or on the new computer as far as that's concerned. If you are referring to Lightroom CC, then when you go to Lightroom.adobe.com you are looking at the same images that you imported to Lightroom CC. The exact same images because that website is pointing to the same cloud location.

Since you have the Creative Cloud photography plan, you can also install Lightroom Classic CC which enables you to import images and store them on your local hard drive(s) and choose to share collections of images to Lightroom.adobe.com. Those collections will be smart previews rather than full-sized images. You will still be able to edit them and share them. The advantage of doing this is that these smart preview collections will not impact your cloud storage allocation.

Creative Cloud Files is a kind of Dropbox-like folder that you get when you have a Creative Cloud account. It's separate from Lightroom CC cloud storage, so adding a photo to it won't make that photo available in Lightroom CC.

Creative Cloud can be used to share everything like a drop box. It gets synced to your PC wherever you choose to do that, the default is down deep in your user files. Unless LRCC, you can not switch off this syncing.

Lrcc is fine for jpegs and raws, and for most video. But if you had many clips that you have assembled in Premiere or else and want to share that control file, then you need to do it via the creative cloud. Likewise, if you had photos in your Premiere project, you can not share those via LRCC. I guess that is not your scope so it is of little importance. If you subscribe to a video plan, you get something like 100Gbyte storage. This storage Volume is also visible in LRCC then. Should you be interested in video, then this is a smart way to increase your LRCC storage volume.

I recently got very confused and had to reinstall Lightroom Classic. I had previously imported photos to other folders in the past, with a Creative Cloud account showing up in the Lightroom library too! This software is great, but can leave anyone flustered if they don't keep current with the ever-evolving Adobe programs.

I will then implement the order and organization of creating new albumns---one at a time---from the external drive and the Creative Cloud files. If I had just left everying in the disorderly mess that it was, I would have gone crazy.

Scott Kelby is President and CEO of KelbyOne, an online educational community for photographers. He is Editor, Publisher, and co-founder of Photoshop User magazine; host of The Grid, the influential, live, weekly talk show for photographers; and is founder of the annual Scott Kelby's Worldwide Photo Walk. (TM) Scott is an award-winning photographer, designer, and bestselling author of more than 100 books, including Photoshop for Lightroom Users; The Landscape Photography Book; Light It, Shoot It, Retouch It; The Adobe Photoshop Book for Digital Photographers; The Flash Book; The Natural Light Portrait Book; and his landmark, and The Digital Photography Book, which is the #1 top-selling book ever on digital photography. His books have been translated into dozens of different languages, including Chinese, Russian, Spanish, Korean, Polish, Taiwanese, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Hebrew, Dutch, Swedish, Turkish, and Portuguese, among many others. He is a recipient of the prestigious ASP International Award, presented annually by the American Society of Photographers for "...contributions in a special or significant way to the ideals of Professional Photography as an art and a science," and the HIPA award, presented for his contributions to photography education worldwide. Scott is Conference Technical Chair for the annual Photoshop World Conference and a frequent speaker at conferences and trade shows around the world. He is featured in a series of online learning courses at KelbyOne.com and has been training photographers and Photoshop users since 1993. For more information on Scott, visit him at: His Lightroom blog: lightroomkillertips.com His personal blog: scottkelby.com Twitter: @scottkelby Facebook: facebook.com/skelby Instagram: @scottkelby

Previous Edition Table of Contents Chapter 1 Importing: Getting your photos into Lightroom Chapter 2 Getting Organized: My System for a happy Lightroom life Chapter 3 Advanced Stuff: That next level of importing & organizing Chapter 4 Customizing: How to set up things your way Chapter 5 Editing Your Images: How to tweak your images like a pro! Chapter 6 Painting with Light: The adjustment brush & other toolbox tools Chapter 7 Special Effects: Making stuff look...well...special! Chapter 8 Problem Photos: Dealing with common image problems Chapter 9 Exporting Images: Saving JPEGs, TIFFs, and more Chapter 10 LR with Photoshop: How and when to use Photoshop Chapter 11 Photo Books: Creating beautiful books with your images Chapter 12 Printing: Unlocking the power of the print Chapter 13 Video: Working with video shot with your camera Chapter 14 Going Mobile: Using Lightroom on your phone/tablet & more Chapter 15 My Workflow: Here's my typical start-to-finish project

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