Lightroom 6 S
6.4 – Thumbnails now update much faster when you edit multiple images using sync or copy and paste. 6.4 – Lightroom’s now much smarter about preemptively building 1:1 previews, which means they load much faster when you’re zoomed in and flipping through photos, even if they weren’t built in advance. If you bought Lightroom 6 online, you can go to the Catalog page to find and download it. In case you bought a physical version like me, you will need a direct link to download Lightroom 6. Adobe hides it on this page. Both of the Windows and MacOS versions are available here. Then, you just need to download the software and install it on your.
Adobe has just releasedLightroom 6.
There are plenty of places to find out about what's new, suchas this post from Adobe for an overview,or Victoria Bampton's exhaustive 'What's New' writeup.
For my part, in this post, I'll justtalk about a few things I think are worth particular mention.
UPDATE: I guess I should mention right away that modern versions (from within the last couple of months) ofmy 45 plugins should work fine onLightroom 6. The major upgrade does cause registrations of my plugins to be lost, but that's easy enough to fix(see here).
You Don't Have to Subscribe
Adobe is really pushing the subscription model these days (
Personally, I like to own (“License”) my copy of software, so I'm gladthat subscription is not the only choice. But in looking at the increasedvalue of my Adobe stock since they started the move toward subscriptions, I see the writing on the wall that I may not have the choice forever. But today we still do.
Requirement for an Adobe ID
Adobe now flat-out requires an Adobe account to install Lightroom 6. This willundoubtedly lead to much bellyaching among a vocal minority for whom it is,on principle, an evil thing... even though like for the rest of us it ispractically-speaking little worse than a one-time 5-minute roadbump.
My personal theory is that this new requirement is to help combat rampant piracy of Lightroom,which until now had little to curb it.
A side note: most folks probably don't realize that long ago (circaLr3), I made it so that my plugins won't runon a pirated copy of Lightroom, with folks who got caught having tovalidate their new, legal copy to my satisfaction before my plugins wouldrun on their computer again. I suspect that most folks who got caught thisway simply decided to forego the use of my plugins rather than actually payfor their own copy of Lightroom, yet still, many many (multiplethousands) folks did respond by buying a copy of Lightroom. I know thisbecause I handled each validation by hand, and have set aside time severaldays a week for the last few years to deal with them.
As a user of Lightroom I want it to grow and thrive, so anything that thwarts pirateswithout too much burden on honest customers is fine with me.
Raw Panorama Merge
This might feel like only a mildly-convenient addition in light of long having had the abilityto merge panoramas in Photoshop or other tools, but you've got to realize that this is mergingthe pre-develop raw data, creating a singleraw file of the merged composition.
It used to be that you had to develop each component photo to whateverfinal look you wanted, then do the merge and live with that one result. But now you merge prior to develop, and can then work with the result like anyother raw file, with all the dynamic latitude and no-loss-of-qualitywhite-balance adjustments that this implies.
Lightroom 6 Shortcuts
I don't have much experience with Lightroom 6's panorama tool, but thispanorama (from the top of this blog post) wascreated with Lightroom, from ten fairly bland shots taken by hand in the rain:
I spent all of a few secondsto select them and invoke “Photo > Photo Merge > Panorama” and let it do its thing. The results certainly exceed the effort that I put into it. 😀
GPU Acceleration
This new option in the preferences has Lightroom use the processingpower of your system's graphics chip to boost performance, mostly withrender speed in Develop.
With my high-end Mid-2014 MacBook Pro, I've got mixed feelings about this option. It indeed does speed up responsiveness in Develop, sometimes remarkably, but other times it seems toadd a jitter to the display. I haven't pined down exactly what causes it, but I seem to noticethe problem most when using the dust-correction tool.
Luckily the “Performance” tab in the Preferences dialog is sticky, so ifI want to turn it on or off it's just a tap of Command-comma to bring upthe option, and a click to toggle the checkbox.
Face-Detection and People Support
Some people won't care about face detection, but I find it's useful,especially after you get enough “critical mass” data. My production Lightroom catalog has 135,000 photos going back to 1986, many of them offamily and friends, so there's value for me to be able to quickly identifyall photos with such-and-such a person in them.
It's quite a lot of work to accurately apply this retroactively to135,000 photos, so I've made only a small dent so far, but it's still useful.
from “Exploring The Mountains of Northern Kyoto by Bicycle”
Of course, one doesn't need automatic face detection to associate peoplewith photos: many photographers already use keywords to do exactly that. I'm just too lazy to manually go through every photo to assign keywordsthat way. Having the hard parts automated tipped the scale for me.
It's not perfect, or even great, but this version seems to be “fairlygood”, with some fairly restrictive design decisions that, how shall I say,leaves ample room for much improvement in future versions.
Crunching Pixels
There are several steps to the process. The first is that Lightroom'sface-recognition engine must crunch on the pixels in the background todetect face locations. This can take a long time... on the order of severaldays to a week for a catalog like mine.
The first thing I did was turn off the “Automatically detect faces inall photos” preference item (the “Metadata” tab of Catalog preferences) sothat I can control when Lightroom pegs the CPU looking for faces. In this mode, Lightroom looks for faces only when you've entered the “People” view(the letter “O” keyboard shortcut) and works on only the selected source.
For the initial check of my 130k photos, I'd selecta year or two worthof photos, enter “People” view, and let it run overnight.
You can assign names to faces (discussed below) while thepixel-crunching of face detection is going on, but I don't recommend it,because as new faces are discovered, the Faces-Mode screen keeps updating...so trying to work with it can be confusing. I've always found it betterto wait until the pixel-crunching face-discovery phase is over for a set ofphotos before I start the name-assignment phase.
Person Keywords
In Lightroom, a “Person” is represented by a specially marked keyword,and most times you'll want to choose the person's name as the text of thekeyword. In Lightroom's “Keywording List”, if you want families togenerally sort together, you'll want to put the family name first. I'd like to put names like “Friedl, Jeffrey”, but a commais not allowed in a name, so I can't do that.
In the end I decided to put names like
Lightroom 6 Standalone
But some folks may well want to choose “FRIEDLJeffrey” or “Jeffrey Friedl”. I suggest reading about a variety of approaches before investing a lot of time onentering names.
Lightroom can let you pick a keyword to be the default parent of all newPeople keywords. As you can see at right, I made a keyword named
Warning: newly-created “People” keywords are, by default, marked for inclusion in exported copies of an image. If you prefer to keep them private, you can exclude all “People” keywords via a new option in the Export/Publishdialogs.
Also, my People Support pluginallows you to easily see which People keywords are marked for export, and to toggle that state quickly.
Assigning Names to Faces
After faces are found within photos, the next step is to assign names to those faces.There are a lot of ways to do this (accepting a guess offered by Lightroom,typing in a new name, dragging thumbnails to named faces, etc.). I'm sure many otheronline resources will go over this step better than I could.
Cleaning Up
The automatic face-detection engine misses a lot of faces.... it simply fails to notice their existence.So, if I really want to make sure that I have fully processed a set of photos, I'll go through themone by one in Loupe view, with the “Draw Face Regions” option turned on (via clicking the person icon in the toolbar).
In this mode, face rectangles that have been detected are shown, and if you see faces that have not been detected,you can drag out boxes for them. You can enter the name of each face as you identify it, though it's often easier to leavethem unnamed until you've gone through all the photos, then return to whatever “Assigning Names to Faces” workflow youfind most productive.
You can draw a face rectangle anywhere... it doesn't have to actually be a face:
It doesn't even have to be a person... you can use it to mark any object you like.
Lightroom doesn't “learn” from the faces that you draw, so there's noharm to the “face knowledge base” if the region you identify is not clearlya face.
Plugin Support for Faces
My People Support plugin has support for “People” keywords,and some enhanced functionality is enabled when used on Lightroom 6.
My Data Explorer plugin has extra search items when used in Lightroom 6,for counting people tagged in photos in various ways.
I wish I could have made my Picasa Face-Recognition Import pluginmigrate its data directly to Lr6's people support, but there's no easy way, sorry.
Related posts:
Lightroom 6 Software Download
July | 10th, | 2008 | Jeffrey's Lightroom Goodies (Plugins and Tools) |
February | 13th, | 2009 | Plugin Registration |
December | 15th, | 2009 | Jeffrey's “Picasa Face-Recognition Import” Lightroom Plugin |
October | 18th, | 2012 | Jeffrey's “Data Explorer” Lightroom Plugin |
January | 21st, | 2015 | Jeffrey's “People Support” Lightroom Plugin |
January | 25th, | 2015 | Exploring The Mountains of Northern Kyoto by Bicycle |
April | 17th, | 2015 | Lunch in a Small Mountain Farming Hamlet in Japan |
April | 23rd, | 2015 | Matt Campagna Wigglegrams Kyoto |
April | 26th, | 2015 | Potential Privacy Issue with Lightroom CC/6 and People Keywords |
April | 30th, | 2015 | Automatic Face Tagging Now Supported in my Upload-to-Facebook Plugin for Lightroom |