In the Edit panel in the Loupe view, tap Healing icon at the bottom of the screen.
Apply selective edits to your photos. Enhance your photos with selective edits, color and tonal adjustments, and fix camera lens flaws. Work with presets and profiles.
When you open a photo in Loupe view, you can choose to work in the following panels:
Edit
Manually edit the photo with various slider controls such as White Balance, Temperature, Exposure, Contrast, and more, at your fingertips. Crop your photos and apply selective edits to specific parts of your photo.
For more information, see the Edit panel.
Info
Change the Title, Caption, and Copyright of your photos. Rate and flag your photo. View the metadata associated with your photo. View the people clusters your photo is a part of and the keywords associated with that photo. For more information, see the Info panel.
Rate and Review
Cycle through your album to quickly rate and flag your photos. For more information, see the Rate and Review panel.
Activity
Post and view comments on your photos that are part of a shared group album. For more information, see Activity panel.
Starting from Lightroom for mobile (Android) 7.0 (October 2021 release), the following workflows no longer apply. To access the latest tools for local adjustments, see Masking.
Selective edit controls in the Edit panel allow you to make corrections to a specific area of a photo. For example, you may want to lighten a face to make it stand out in a portrait. To make local corrections, you can apply adjustments using the Brush Selection tool, Radial Selection tool, and the Linear Selection tool.
Selective edits are nondestructive and are not permanently applied to the photo.
Work with the Healing tools to remove unnecessary spots, power lines, people, objects, or other such distractions from a photo.
Starting the October 2022 release of Lightroom for mobile (Android), you can remove tough spots, blemishes, and more from a photo using the Remove tool.
In the Edit panel in the Loupe view, tap Healing icon at the bottom of the screen.
Select one of the following Healing tools:
Remove: Removes objects, blemishes, etc, and automatically fills the selection with content generated from the source area.
Heal: Borrows the texture from the source area and matches it to the color and tone of the target area in the photo.
Clone: Replicates the pixels from the source area in the photo to the target area.
The tools transfer the texture borrowed from the source area to the target area. The Remove tool finds the source automatically and uses it to fill the stroked area. The Heal tool, however, considers the colors and tones surrounding the target area and blends everything together. While the Clone exactly replicates the pixels from the source area to the target area.
With the Remove tool selected, brush over the object in your photo that you want to remove or retouch.
Change the size, or opacity of the selected Healing tool as necessary.
The Refine option includes:
With the Heal or Clone tool selected, brush over the object in your photo that you want to remove or retouch. After brushing over the object in your photo, you'll notice two white marquee areas. The marquee area with solid lines over the object you painted designates the target area. The dashed lines denote the source area.
Change the size, feather, or opacity of the selected Healing tool as necessary.
Refine option includes:
If you're using a mobile device, touch the controls on the left, and then drag them up or down on the screen to adjust the value. If you're using a tablet device, use the control sliders to adjust the values.
Healing options
Tap the box on the left side of the screen to see the Healing options. Choose Remove, Heal, or Clone to switch between the tools.
Long-press on the photo to see a Before view.
To confirm the edits, select the icon.
Select the Undo or Redo icons to move back or forward in your edits, one step at a time.
In the Edit panel in the Loupe view, tap Crop icon at the bottom of the screen.
The available Cropping options are displayed as tiles, along the bottom of the screen. Swipe to the left or right, to view all the tiles. Tap a tile to apply the corresponding option.
Do one of the following for additional options:
To confirm the edits, tap icon.
Profiles allow you to control how colors and tonality are rendered in your photos. They are intended to serve as a starting point or foundation for making image edits.
Beginning with Lightroom for mobile (Android) 3.5 and Lightroom desktop 1.4 (June 2018 releases), Presets and Profiles (including third-party, custom user presets and profiles) sync automatically across Lightroom desktop and mobile.
However, the custom user presets and profiles do not sync with Lightroom Classic.
Applying a profile on your photo doesn't change or overwrite the value of other edit control sliders. Therefore, you can make edits to your photos as you like and then choose to apply a profile on top of your edited image.
To browse and apply profiles, do the following:
In the Edit panel in the Loupe view, tap Profiles icon at the bottom of the screen.
See the screenshots below for reference: Tapping Adobe Raw brings up the profile groups menu.
When you import photos, Adobe Color and Adobe Monochrome profiles are applied by default to color and black-and-white photos respectively.
Tap to choose any of the profile groups from the menu to view profiles available in that group.
Favorites:
Displays profiles that you've marked as favorite. See Add a profile to Favorites.
Basic:
This profile group is available for non-raw photos only and provides two profile options - Color and Monochrome.
Profiles for raw photos
The following profile groups appear when you are editing a raw photo.
Adobe Raw: Adobe Raw profiles significantly improve color rendering and provide a good starting point for editing your raw images. Adobe Color profile─which is designed to provide a good color/tone balance for any image─is applied by default to the raw photos that you import in Lightroom.
Camera Matching: Displays profiles based on the camera make/model of your raw photo. Use Camera Matching profiles if you prefer the color rendering in your raw files to match what you see on your camera’s display screen.
Legacy: Displays legacy profiles that were also provided in the earlier versions of the Lightroom app.
Creative profiles for raw and non-raw photos
Creative profiles work on any file type including raw photos, JPEGs, and TIFFs. These profiles are designed to create a certain style or effect in your photo.
Artistic: Use these profiles if you want the color rendering in your photo to be more edgy, with stronger color shifts.
B&W: Use these profiles to get optimal tone shifts required for black and white work.
Modern: Use these profiles to create unique effects that fit in with the modern photography styles.
Vintage: Use these profiles to replicate the effects of vintage photos.
When you apply any of the Artistic, B&W, Modern, and Vintage profiles, Lightroom for mobile provides an additional Amount slider that allows you to control profile intensity.
You can swipe horizontally toward right or left on the profile thumbnails to browse all the profiles available under a selected profile group.
Tap a profile to apply it to your photo.
Long-press on the photo to see a Before view.
To confirm the edits, tap icon.
Tap the Undo or Redo icons to move back or forward in your edits, one step at a time.
To add a profile to your Favorites profile group, press-and-hold the profile's thumbnail. If the profile is currently selected, you can also tap the gray star icon appearing at the upper-right corner of the profile thumbnail.
The white star icon at the upper-right corner of the profile thumbnail indicates a favorite profile.
The Manage Profiles option allows you to show or hide various preset groups that are displayed in the Profiles menu - Adobe Raw, Camera Matching, Legacy, Artistic, B&W, Modern, Vintage, or any other profiles that you've imported.
You can also use the Manage Profiles option to show the legacy Lightroom profile groups, which are hidden by default.
To show/hide profile groups, follow the steps below:
Note:
Your settings to show/hide profile groups is specific to each device or computer. For example, you can hide some profile groups in Lightroom for mobile but they will still be visible in Lightroom on other mobile devices/desktop and vice versa.
In the Edit panel in the Loupe view, tap Profiles icon at the bottom of the screen.
Tap the three-dots icon at the upper-right corner of the Profiles pop-up menu and choose Manage Profiles.
In the Manage Profiles screen, switch on the profile groups that you want to show in the Profiles menu. Switch off the profile groups that you want to hide from the Profiles menu.
Tap in the upper-right corner.
The Profiles menu now displays only those profiles groups which you've switched on using the Manage Profiles option.
To import dcp and xmp profiles within Lightroom, follow these steps:
Open a photo in Loupe view. In the Edit screen, tap the Profiles icon in the bottom panel.
Tap the three-dots icon in the upper-right corner and select Import Profiles.
Tap the profiles you want to import from Google Drive or any folder on your mobile. You can select individual dcp or xmp files. You can also select zip files that contain multiple dcp and xmp files.
The imported profiles appear in the Profiles pop-up menu.
A Preset allows you to predetermine positions of all or selected sliders and apply them to your photo. Also, you can edit a photo to your liking and save that exact combination of slider positions to apply on other photos.
In the Edit panel of the Loupe view, tap Presets icon at the bottom of the screen.
Presets are grouped into three tabs: Recommended, Premium, and Yours.
Open any group and tap the preset to apply it to the photo.
Recommended
Premium
These presets have been categorized into groups such as Adaptive: Subject & Sky, Portraits, Vintage, Cinematic, Seasonal, and more. With every new release of Lightroom, more presets will be added to the existing pack.
Yours
These are the presets that you have saved. You can also find presets for categories by Color, Creative, B&W, and more.
Beginning with Lightroom for mobile (Android) 3.5 and Lightroom desktop 1.4 (June 2018 releases), Presets and Profiles (including third-party, custom user presets and profiles) sync automatically across Lightroom desktop and mobile.
However, the custom user presets and profiles do not sync with Lightroom Classic.
Open a photo in the Loupe view based on which you want to create a user preset. Do any one of the following:
In the New Preset screen, specify the following:
Preset Name: Type the desired preset name.
Preset Group: By default, custom presets are saved in the User Presets group. You can also create a new group using the Create New Preset Group option.
Now select which edit settings you want to save as a preset.
Click the Select pop-up menu and choose any of the following options:
On selecting the Auto option in the edit panel, Auto Settings is enabled in the Select pop-up menu for Default and Modified options.
You can also tap the (>) icon to navigate within the edit setting group, and then choose specific settings from the submenu. For example, you can navigate within the Light settings group and then select/ deselect any of the settings from the submenu - Exposure, Contrast, Highlights, Shadows, Whites, Blacks, Tone Curve.
After selecting the required edit settings, tap the tick mark (
Your new preset is now available in the Library view of the Presets menu.
In the Edit panel in the Loupe view, tap Presets icon at the bottom of the screen.
In the Presets pop-up menu, locate the user preset that you want to update, move, or delete. Tap the three-dots icon next to that user preset and choose any of the following options:
Update: In the Update Preset screen, modify the edit settings to include in the user preset as necessary.
Click the Select pop-up menu and choose any of the following options:
After modifying the required edit settings, tap the tick mark (
Rename: In the Rename Preset screen, modify Preset Name as necessary.
After modifying the preset name, tap the tick mark (
Move To: Select this option to move a user preset to an existing preset group or a new preset group by tapping the corresponding checkbox. On selecting the desired preset group, tap Move at the bottom of the screen.
To know how to create a new preset group, see Create presets.
Delete: Choose this option to permanently delete the user preset from all synced devices.
To import lrtemplate and xmp presets, do the following:
Open a photo in Loupe view. In the Edit screen, tap the Presets icon in the bottom panel.
Tap the three-dots icon in the upper-right corner and select Import Presets.
Tap the presets you want to import either from Google Drive or any folder on your mobile. You can select individual lrtemplate or xmp files. You can also select zip files that contain multiple lrtemplate and xmp files.
The imported presets then appear in the Presets pop-up menu.
For more information on importing DNG presets, see Import Presets.
The Manage Presets option allows you to show or hide various preset groups that are displayed in the Presets menu - Color, Creative, B&W, Curve, Grain, Sharpening, Vignetting, and User Presets.
You can also use the Manage Presets option to show the legacy Lightroom preset groups, which are hidden by default.
To show/hide preset groups, follow the steps below:
Note:
Your settings to show/hide preset groups is specific to each device or computer. For example, you can hide some preset groups in Lightroom for mobile but they will still be visible in Lightroom on other mobile devices/desktop and vice versa.
In the Edit panel in the Loupe view, tap Presets icon at the bottom of the screen.
Tap the three-dots icon at the upper-right corner of the Presets pop-up menu and choose Manage Presets.
In the Manage Presets screen, switch on the preset groups that you want to show in the Presets menu. Switch off the preset groups that you want to hide from the Presets menu.
Tap in the upper-right corner.
The Presets menu now displays only those preset groups which you've switched on using the Manage Presets option.
If you attempt to create a duplicate preset with the same name under the same preset group, a Duplicate Preset Name dialog box opens with options to:
In the Presets panel, you can view certain presets in italics as these are partially compatible presets. This means that the profiles associated with these presets are meant for a different camera. You can choose to hide these partially compatible presets in the Presets panel. To do this, follow these steps:
Open a photo in Loupe view and in the Edit panel, tap Presets icon.
Tap the three-dots icon in the Presets panel to bring up the options menu.
Tap Show Partially Compatible Presets to not view the partially compatible presets in the Presets panel.
To view all presets again at any time, tap Show Partially Compatible Presets.
In the Edit panel in the Loupe view, click the Auto icon at the bottom to have Lightroom for mobile automatically apply the best edits for these slider controls in your photos: Exposure, Contrast, Highlights, Shadows, Whites, Blacks, Saturation, and Vibrance.
The Auto settings feature in Lightroom for mobile uses Adobe Sensei to intelligently apply adjustments based on a photo’s light and color characteristics.
You can adjust the overall tonal scale of your image using the tone controls in the Light menu. As you work, keep an eye on the end points of the histogram.
In the Edit panel in the Loupe view, tap Light icon at the bottom of the screen to view the tone controls. Adjust the slider controls to apply the desired edits to your photos: Exposure, Contrast, Highlights, Shadows, Whites, Blacks, Saturation, and Vibrance.
The Tone Curve graph in the Light menu represents changes made to the tonal scale of a photo.
In the Edit panel menu in the Loupe view, tap Light accordion, then tap CURVE.
To bring up the Histogram of a photo in the Loupe view, tap the three-dot icon at the upper-right corner and enable Show Histogram option from the menu that appears. You can now observe the Histogram as you adjust the tone controls.
The horizontal axis represents the original tone values (input values), with black on the left and progressively lighter values toward the right. The vertical axis represents the changed tone values (output values), with black on the bottom and lighter values progressing to white at the top. Use the tone curve to tweak the tone adjustments you make to a photo.
You can also choose to make adjustments to individual points on the tone curve in the Red, Green, or Blue channel individually, or all three channels at once.
For related useful information, see Fine-tune the tonal scale using the Tone Curve panel.
In the Edit panel in the Loupe view, the Color menu provides you controls to do the following:
Color Grading replaces Split Tone. Set the blending slider to 100 to achieve the same effect as the pre-existing Split Tone feature.
For related useful information, see the following:
In the Edit panel in the Loupe view, tap Effects icon at the bottom of the screen to view the controls.
Adjust the effects sliders:
Texture
Smoothens or accentuates textured details in your photo. Move the slider to the left to smoothen details; move it to the right to accentuate details. When you adjust the Texture slider, the color or tonality does not change.
Clarity
Adds depth to an image by increasing local contrast. To maximize the effect, increase the setting until you see halos near the edge details of the image, and then reduce the setting slightly.
When using this setting, it is best to zoom in to 100% or greater. To zoom in, double-tap the photo or use the outward spread gesture.
Dehaze
Controls the amount of haze in a photograph. Drag to the right to remove haze; drag to the left to add haze.
Vignette Amount
Applies a dark or light vignette for artistic effect to a photo. Negative values darken the corners of the photo. Positive values lighten the corners.
For related useful information, see Vignette, grain, and dehaze effects.
Grain Amount
Adds realistic film-grain effect to your photos. Drag the slider to the right to add grain. When you add grain, you can also control the grain size and roughness using the Size and Roughness sliders respectively.
In Adobe Photoshop Lightroom for mobile, you can sharpen your photo to enhance edge definition and bring out details in the photo.
You can reduce the image noise by removing the extraneous visible artifacts that degrade image quality. Image noise includes luminance (grayscale) noise, which makes an image look grainy, and chroma (color) noise, which is usually visible as colored artifacts in the image. Photos taken with high ISO speeds can have noticeable noise.
In the Edit panel in the Loupe view, tap Details icon at the bottom of the screen.
Note:
When applying selective edits, only Noise and Sharpness controls are available in the Detail menu.
Adjust any of the following controls:
Sharpening controls
Luminance noise reduction controls
Color noise reduction controls
Camera lenses can exhibit different types of defects at certain focal lengths, f-stops, and focus distances. You can correct and/or minimize these issues in the selected photo using the options provided in the Optics icon in the Edit panel - Remove Chromatic Aberration and Lens Profile Corrections.
In the Edit panel in the Loupe view, tap Optics icon at the bottom of the screen.
Chromatic aberration appears as a color fringe along the edges of objects. It is caused by the failure of the lens to focus different colors to the same spot, aberrations in sensor microlenses, and by flare.
Remove Chromatic Aberration:
To remove chromatic aberration in your selected photo, enable Remove Chromatic Aberration option in the Optics panel.
Lightroom for mobile includes numerous lens profiles, which can be used to correct common lens aberrations such as geometric distortion and vignetting. The profiles are based on metadata that identifies the camera and lens used to capture the photo, and then compensates accordingly.
Lens Profile Corrections:
Enable Lens Profile Corrections option in the Optics panel to automatically select a matching lens profile based on the camera model, focal length, f-stop and focus distance information in your photo's metadata.
Cameras with built-in lens profile support
Lens correction for all Micro 4/3 (MFT) lenses and cameras, including Panasonic, Olympus, and other cameras (Fuji X, Leica Q, plus many point-and-shoot models from Canon) happens automatically without your interaction. If your lens is supported automatically, Lightroom for mobile displays the message Built-in Lens Profile Applied in the Optics panel.
(Optional) If Lightroom for mobile is unable to find a matching lens profile automatically, do the following:
If you want to change the matching lens profile applied by Lightroom automatically, do the following:
The lens profiles that are available depend on whether you’re adjusting a raw or a non-raw file. For a list of supported lenses, see Supported lenses.
You can customize the correction applied by the profile by adjusting the following sliders below lens profile:
Distortion Correction:
The default value 100 applies 100% of the distortion correction in the profile. Values over 100 apply greater correction to the distortion; values under 100 apply less correction to the distortion.
Lens Vignetting:
The default value 100 applies 100% of the vignetting correction in the profile. Values over 100 apply greater correction to vignetting; values under 100 apply less correction to vignetting.
While capturing photos, a close distance to the subject as well as certain types of lenses can distort perspective and make straight lines appear bowed, tilted or skewed in your photos. For example, shooting up at a tall building can make the building look like it's leaning away from you. You can easily fix and adjust the perspective of your photo using the Upright modes and geometry slider tools in the Geometry panel.
The Upright modes provide four automatic perspective correction options - Auto, Level, Vertical, and Full, as well as a manual Guided option. You can also refine the adjustment using the geometry sliders.
Select a photo with skewed geometry.
(Recommended) In the Edit panel in the Loupe view, tap the Optics icon at the bottom of the screen, enable the Lens Profile Corrections option.
Tap the Geometry icon at the bottom of the screen.
From the Upright menu, choose an option to apply the correction to the photo:
Cycle through the Upright modes until you find the most preferable setting.
All the Upright modes correct distortion and perspective errors. The best setting varies from one photo to another. Experiment with the modes before deciding on the best possible mode for your photo.
Guided Upright mode
If you chose the Guided Upright mode, do the following:
Click the () Guided Upright tool icon and then draw two to four guides by sliding finger on the photo.
Once you have drawn at least two guides, the photo transforms interactively. You can draw up to four guides on your photo in any of the following combinations:
For any other combination, Lightroom for mobile displays an Invalid Guide message.
Click Done.
(Optional) While correcting the perspective of your photo, you may get white areas near the image boundaries. To remove the white area, enable the Constrain Crop option, which automatically crops the photo according to the original dimension.
Some of the Upright modes may crop-off pixels in your photo to correct perspective, even when the Constrain Crop option is off. You may not be able to retrieve the cropped pixels later in the Crop mode.
Use the geometry sliders to fine-tune the perspective corrections - Distortion, Vertical, Horizontal, Rotate, Aspect, Scale, X Offset, Y Offset.
Lightroom for mobile (Android) allows you to copy the edits that you've applied on a photo and paste it across multiple photos. You can also choose which edit settings you want to copy from a photo.
Select a photo from which you want to copy the edit settings.
Tap the three-dots () icon at the upper-right corner and choose Copy Settings.
From the Copy Settings dialog that appears, tap Select at the top and choose any of the following:
You can also manually select or deselect specific settings by expanding the edit setting groups.
After making the selection, tap icon.
Tap the three-dots icon at the upper-right corner and choose Paste Settings.
Undo or redo
To undo or redo the most recent edit in the Loupe view, tap the Undo or Redo icon that appears at the upper-right corner of the screen.
If you've made multiple edits, tap the () icon to reveal the Undo and Redo
icons. Now, tap the Undo or Redo icon to move back or forward in your edits, one step at a time.
Reset
To fully reset an image to its original state, tap Reset at the end of the adjustments menu as shown in the above image. In the Reset menu, tap an action to revert your photo to a previous state.
Versions help you to save different edits of the same photo so that you can easily compare them and experiment with different edits. Lightroom also automatically saves significant edits of your photos as Versions. To create and save Versions:
Open a photo in the Edit view and apply the desired edits.
Scroll the bottom panel and tap Versions.
There are two tabs in Versions: Named and Auto.
Named
In this tab, you can view the Original which is the photo you imported. The Current thumbnail displays the selected photo with the applied edits. Tap Create Version to save these edits as a Version. Enter a name for the Version and tap Create. The edits are saved in the Versions list. This way you can create and save different edits as Versions.
Your Raw Default settings in Preferences might impact the Original photo. To change raw defaults, see Set up raw defaults.
Auto
This tab contains all the versions that are automatically saved by Lightroom each time you leave the Edit view after making an edit. The Auto Versions have a date and time stamp added to their name. You can also save an Auto Version as a Named Version by tapping the three-dots icon at the upper-right corner and selecting Save as Named Version. Enter a name for the Version and tap Save.
To apply edits from a Version to the selected photo, select the desired Version from the Versions list and tap Apply.
Select a Version and tap the three-dot icon at the upper-right corner to rename or delete it. To delete all Named or Auto Versions, tap the three-dot icon at the lower-right corner and tap Delete all Named Versions or Delete all Autosaves.
The created Versions are synced across Lightroom for mobile (iOS and Android) and Lightroom desktop.
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