Skip to main content

Lightroom CC update makes imports on iOS and iPad a breeze

Adobe Lightroom CC phone
Daven Mathies/Digital Trends

Adobe Lightroom is getting one step closer to allowing photographers to ditch the computer entirely. On Tuesday, December 10, Adobe launched a handful of updates for Lightroom CC, including the ability to skip the camera roll and import photos directly on iOS.

Previously, importing photos to Lightroom on iOS or iPadOS from a camera or memory card required that the photos first be added to the camera roll. That meant those files took up space in two places, on both the device itself and the Creative Cloud, while also adding extra steps to the import process.

After releasing a sneak peek of the feature last month, the direct import option is now rolling out to iOS and iPadOS. Adobe says the option is made possible by an update to iOS and iPadOS 13.2. Using an SD or USB 3.0 adapter on iOS or a USB-C card reader on the iPad, RAW photos can now head straight to Lightroom without being duplicated in the camera roll. After import, users can edit full-resolution RAW files with the same conversion tools as Lightroom CC for desktop, Adobe says.

The update also includes new options for exporting images, with the option to save files as DNG, JPEG, or TIF files. Photographers also now have more choices in the metadata, watermarking, file naming, sharpening, and color space in the new export window.

Adobe also added the ability to create shared albums form any device that can access Lightroom CC, including desktop computers and smartphones using the free version of the app.

Adobe also announced today that Lightroom can now be purchased directly through the Microsoft Store.

Photography is becoming increasingly mobile, yet a few key features are keeping some photographers from leaving their laptops behind. A more streamlined import process and additional export options help close the gap a bit, but Adobe is still working on bringing Photoshop for iPad up to speed with the desktop software. 

The desktop-only Lightroom Classic still has a few features that the all-device Lightroom CC doesn’t, such as creating a slideshow or creating export presets, but that list of missing features is becoming increasingly shorter with each update.

Editors' Recommendations

Hillary K. Grigonis
Hillary never planned on becoming a photographer—and then she was handed a camera at her first writing job and she's been…
WWDC 2022 announcements: iOS 16, iPadOS 16, WatchOS 9, MacOS Ventura, MacBook Air M2, and more
Apple CEO Tim Cook looks at a display of brand new redesigned MacBook Air laptop during the WWDC22

Apple has finally kicked off the 2022 edition of its Worldwide Developers Conference. The main keynote of the conference, known as WWDC for short, will be streaming online, along with various breakout sessions, throughout the week.

The focus of the event was on the latest versions of Apple's operating systems, including iOS, iPadOS, MacOS, and WatchOS, and tvOS. A new MacBook Air powered by an M2 processor also made an appearance.
Watch a replay of the WWDC keynote
WWDC 2022 - June 6 | Apple

Read more
Apple just gave you a reason to ditch your Mac for an iPad
An iPad and an external display using Stage Manager in iPadOS 16.

Apple has added support for multiple windows and external displays to iPadOS at its Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC), bringing the iPad closer to the Mac than at any other point in its history. For many people, it could be the final push to abandon their laptop or desktop computer for good.

The key to this near-revolutionary change is a feature Apple calls Stage Manager, coming in iPadOS 16. When you open Stage Manager, your main open window is shown at the center of your display. On the left-hand side is a list of your other open apps, with multiple windows of the same app grouped together. You can tap an app in the sidebar to bring it to the front.

Read more
The best 360-degree camera apps for iOS and Android
360-degree-camera-app

Today's smartphones have succeeded in making amateur photographers of most of us. But as smartphone photography became ubiquitous, a more intriguing version of instant photography came into vogue -- the 360-degree spherical panorama. A 360-degree photo lets you observe a scene in any direction from a single point of view and smartphone apps make it incredibly easy to accomplish, as you don't have to do anything except use a specialized app and move your smartphone around to capture and view a scene.

Before modern smartphones, the only way you could capture a genuine spherical panorama was to use a special camera designed for the task and employ stitching software to bind multiple shots together. You can still do that, but today's photo apps make it possible not only to shoot 360-degree images, videos, and panos, but to instantly share them privately or via social media platforms like Facebook, Instagram, or YouTube. Here are some of the best 360-degree camera apps currently available for iOS and Android.
Google Street View

Read more