![]() This doesn’t mean you always need to be online, as you can also keep a local cached copy of some/all of the images for offline use. Your photos are stored in the Adobe cloud, which means they’re available on all of your devices. The Lightroom (cloud ecosystem) apps are designed for modern living, so you can capture photos on your phone or load them from your camera, sort through them on your tablet when you have a few minutes to spare, edit them on your desktop, and then share them on the web. For clarity, we’ll refer to these apps as Lightroom (cloud ecosystem), to differentiate from Lightroom Classic. Lightroom (formerly Lightroom CC) is a family of apps that started out as a simple mobile app, and has grown into a full ecosystem that runs on Windows, macOS, iPadOS, iOS, Android, ChromeOS, tvOS and the web. Some photographers were concerned that the launch of the cloud-based Lightroom might mean the end of road for Lightroom Classic, but it’s still being developed and improved. We’ve covered Lightroom Classic in detail in Adobe Lightroom Classic – The Missing FAQ. If you’re an advanced user, the power and control it offers is huge, but if you’re new to Lightroom, the learning curve may be a bit overwhelming. Since Lightroom Classic has been available for years, it has lots of features. This is ideal for photographers with TB’s of images, but requires reasonable computer literacy. You’re in charge of managing the files, the organization, the backups, etc. It runs on Windows and macOS, and stores your photos in folders on your local hard drives. Lightroom Classic is the traditional version of Lightroom that’s been around for years, hence the name Classic. Let’s start by identifying the current Lightroom versions, and their main differences. So what’s the difference? Which one is right for you? Which will suit your lifestyle and photography workflow? Or can you use them together? Let’s find out… If you’re a little confused, you’re not alone. ![]() I will do that in LrC, deleting images from LrC, the Local disk, the Adobe Cloud and Lightroom on my iPadPro.Whether you’ve used Lightroom for years, or you’re just getting started, you’ve likely come across the fact that there’s two completely different programs, both called Lightroom. ![]() When the time comes to delete rejected images. Everything (rejected images and all) will be in my master catalog by the time I return or very soon after. If I have a decent internets connection during my travels, the images imported into Lightroom will sync to the Adobe Cloud and since my iMac is at home running LrC, that master catalog will sync all of these new images from Lightroom and the Adobe Cloud. These will get culled with a Reject Flag in Lightroom. While on my trip, I will import a days shoot into Lightroom on my iPadPro. All will remain in LrC with a reject flag until I am ready to delete them from Lightroom Classic and the disk. Perhaps 20% of those will see the end of the Workflow after that trip. I find it more efficient to delete Rejected Images at the end of the workflow rather than by dibs and dabs during my workflow. I wait until I am finished with the workflow and Delete images that have been rejected from both the catalog and the Disk Drive. Click to expand.This is exactly what I do (or did before I started using Lightroom on an iPadPro for the front end.) I only shoot RAW (even on my phone).
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