
You can edit, share, search and organize them in Lightroom CC just as if they were imported into Lightroom CC in the first place.

In fact, if you launch Lightroom CC you will see all the images you synced from Classic in the Collections you created.
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They won’t be at the full resolution, but except for printing, the resolution you do get will be fine – especially for any on-screen display. Your mobile devices can display, edit and share images just as if they were in Lightroom CC. You do have to manually add images you want to sync to Collections, but once that’s done, it’s all kept up to date automatically. Lightroom Classic cannot sync your full-res files to the cloud in the way that Lightroom CC does, but it can sync smaller DNG versions in synchronised Collections. These images are all viewable and editable in Lightroom CC and its ecosystem, but synced from Lightroom Classic – the best of both worlds? (Image credit: Rod Lawton/Digital Camera World) 6. Lightroom CC locks you in to its little ecosystem in a way that doesn’t make sense… except perhaps in a very cynical way. So you CAN open an image in Photoshop from Lightroom CC and THEN launch the plug-in you need, but that seems a really clumsy way to go about things that takes twice as long and needs an additional application that gobbles up precious memory you might not have available. Lightroom CC does not support plug-ins and only talks to one external editor – Photoshop. Most come with plug-ins that you can launch from within Lightroom Classic, and for those that don’t (like Capture One) you can run them separately, export your processed images to the same folder structure used by your Lightroom catalog and then sync your folders or import the new images manually when you’re done. Lightroom Classic plays nicely with all of these. I also use Capture One, Exposure X, DxO PhotoLab and Nik Collection, ON1 Photo RAW, Luminar and more. It’s not just Adobe that makes great photo-editing software.

Lightroom Classic works with them pretty well, Lightroom CC does not. There are lots of programs that are better at certain things than Lightroom, like DxO PhotoLab for noise reduction, for example. I’ve tried every way I can to work around this, but that just kills Lightroom CC for me. You can create multiple versions for an image, but it still only has one thumbnail, and you only see one version of that image when browsing. Lightroom CC now supports ‘versions’ but these are really just saved history snapshots and not the same thing at all. They seem to me one of the principal advantages of non-destructive editing tools like Lightroom – the ability to create multiple ‘versions’ of the same image with different processing treatments alongside each other. Others may disagree, but I can’t do without Virtual Copies. Both Lightroom CC and Lightroom Classic offer an impressive set of non-destructive editing tools, and Lightroom CC does almost as much as the desktop version.īut it doesn’t offer Virtual Copies. So let’s switch tack to everyday editing.

(Image credit: Rod Lawton/Digital Camera World) 4. One image, four different versions (or as many as you like) side by side. **Actually, I've just noticed that Lightroom CC will "Store a copy of all originals at the specified location" if you check that box in the Preferences, so I have to take some of that back – but I assume all my 'edits' (adjustments) are still in the cloud.** But it doesn’t – so I think I’d rather keep my images on my desktop computer where I can organise and back them up myself, and very often load them a lot more quickly. If Lightroom CC offered desktop storage but ‘mirrored’ my library to its cloud servers, that would be fine. Of course, I can always keep my originals on my own computer, but then I’m maintaining two image libraries in two places and it’s all getting messy. But the bigger my image library gets, the more I stand to lose if something DOES happen – and the more its going to cost me in Adobe cloud storage later when 1TB is no longer enough. I trust Adobe with my images, I trust it to keep backups, I trust it to have zero or near-zero downtime. You can increase your local cache so that more are stored on your own computer, but that’s a workaround, not an alternative storage location. Lightroom CC takes over your storage so that all your images are in the cloud and not on your computer. Where my pictures are stored is an issue for me. Call me old-fashioned, but I prefer my images here and not on a server somewhere in another part of the world.
