![]() ![]() For example, tap and hold an image, then assign a rating by a simple finger flick to reject, unflag, or pick an image. I also appreciated the fluid, touch interface the touch and the gestures made selecting, editing, cropping, and sharing images a breeze. As I scanned through my images, I appreciated that I could see, at a glance, the shutter speed, aperture, ISO, and resolution of an image at a glance. I found it mostly efficient and finger friendly. I really liked the overall presentation and operation of Lightroom mobile. One of these buttons brings up a filmstrip view of all images, so you don’t have to go back a screen to find another image the next two run through the gamut of adjustable controls and the final one provides cropping and image rotation. Tap any image to view it tap again to bring up basic image information, the histogram, and the navigation chrome, with its four navigation buttons at bottom and its upload and share button at top right. ![]() Lightroom mobile provides useful image information, such as shutter speed, aperture, and ISO, at a glance.Įnter a collection, and you’ll see image thumbnails crammed side-by-side on the display. You can also add new collections on the device, be it for importing images from the camera roll or for reorganizing images from existing collections. Tap on the three dots in the lower right corner to reveal available actions for that collection: Add images to it from your camera roll manually or automatically, enable offline editing, rename collection, or remove collection. Collections appear stacked on top of each other, with the most recently changed one at top. The magic that is Lightroom mobile is that you can edit your collections on the fly, and changes will be visible back on your desktop once you sync again (or in near real-time if you’re connected). Image collections are shown in a vertical scroll, with the most recently changed collection on top. You’ll need to first add your images to a collection on your desktop Lightroom then, click a tiny Sync button to the left of the collection’s name to send that collection to your iPad. ![]() Adobe says there’s a natural limit, though, based on the iPad’s maximum available storage: A 128GB iPad can hold up to 60,000 images, according to Adobe. This process doesn’t use Adobe’s Creative Cloud, but rather a separate Lightroom cloud infrastructure that enables you to sync as many images as you want without impacting your 20GB of Creative Cloud storage. ![]()
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