Signing in with your Adobe ID connects Lightroom 5.4 on the desktop (top) to Lightroom Mobile on the iPad (bottom). To edit raw photos using Lightroom Mobile, you must sign into both Lightroom mobile and Lightroom on the desktop (version 5.4 or later) with your Adobe ID so that Adobe can identify which two instances of Lightroom will be synchronized. You need an Adobe ID to sign into the app, and if you want to synchronize changes between Lightroom Mobile and desktop Lightroom, you also need an Adobe Creative Cloud subscription (the $9.99/month Photoshop Photography Program qualifies). You can download and install Lightroom Mobile from the iOS App Store to an iPad at no charge. But that association also creates high expectations for Lightroom Mobile to fulfill. Lightroom Mobile isn’t the first iPad app that can edit raw files, but it’s already the most interesting option simply by its association with Adobe Photoshop Lightroom, the popular raw workflow application for desktop computers. While the Apple iPad and other tablets have found a role in mobile photography, they lack a robust workflow for the raw photo files produced by advanced digital cameras. Pros: Automatic synchronization of edits between Lightroom Mobile and desktop Lightroom, high-quality raw editing controls, uses multi-touch gestures well.Ĭons: Can’t import raw files directly from attached cameras or cards, iPad only, sync requires Creative Cloud subscription, very limited metadata support, no custom presets.
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