Click (My Photos panel.
) icon on the left to bring upIn My Photos panel, choose the album that contains the photo that you want to edit.
Learn how to edit photos using different controls and presets in Lightroom (desktop).
You can access the Edit controls in Detail view. In the Edit panel, the edit controls are organized under various panels that you can expand/collapse to access those controls─Profile, Light, Color, Effects, Detail, Optics, and Geometry. To help you visually understand the effect that each of these controls produces in your photo, this article provides accompanying animations and visuals to illustrate the concepts.
Working with Lightroom on your mobile devices? See Edit photos in Lightroom for mobile (iOS) and Edit photos in Lightroom for mobile (Android).
To know more about editing videos in Lightroom, see Edit Videos.
To begin editing a photo using any of the Edit controls, follow the steps below:
Click (My Photos panel.
) icon on the left to bring upIn My Photos panel, choose the album that contains the photo that you want to edit.
If you're in Photo Grid () view or Square Grid (
) view, select the photo that you want to edit. Now, click (
) icon in the toolbar at the bottom to switch to Detail view.
If you're already in Detail () view, select the photo that you want to edit from the filmstrip appearing at the bottom of your current selection.
The Edit controls are only available in Detail view.
To bring up the Edit panel in Detail view, click () icon at the upper-right corner.
You can now expand/collapse the panels to access edit controls organized under─Profile, Light, Color, Effects, Detail, Optics, and Geometry. These edit controls are explained in detail below.
You can view Highlight and Shadow clipping indicators in the upper corners of the histogram to check areas in your photo that are either too light or dark, respectively, as you make edits.
To view highlight and shadow clipping in your photo, follow these steps:
In the Detail () view, select a photo that you want to edit. Click (
) icon at the upper-right corner to view the Edit panel.
In the Edit panel, click the three-dot menu icon and select Show Histogram.
In the Histogram:
Re-click the upper-left or upper-right illuminated clipping indicator to hide the respective clipping in the photo.
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 desktop.
Profiles allow you to control how colors and tonality are rendered in your photos. The profiles provided in the Profile panel are intended to serve as a starting point or foundation for making image edits.
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:
If you're in Photo Grid () view or Square Grid (
) view, select a photo that you want to edit. Now, click (
) icon in the toolbar at the bottom to switch to Detail view.
If you're already in Detail () view, select a photo that you want to edit from the filmstrip appearing at the bottom of your current selection.
Click () icon at the upper-right corner to bring up the Edit panel.
In the Profile panel at the top, use the Profile pop-up menu to quickly access Adobe Raw profiles. To view other available profiles, click Browse.
When you import photos, Adobe Color and Adobe Monochrome profiles are applied by default to color and black-and-white photos respectively.
Expand any of the profile groups (explained below) to view the profiles available in that group.
While browsing the profiles in the Profile panel, click the three-dot menu to access the viewing and filtering options. You can choose to view the profiles as a List, as Grid thumbnails, or Large thumbnails. You can also filter the profiles to be displayed by 'type' - Color or B&W.
Favorites:
Displays profiles that you've marked as favorite. See Add a profile to Favorites.
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.
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.
Note:
When you apply any of the Artistic, B&W, Modern, and Vintage profiles, Lightroom provides an additional Amount slider that allows to control profile intensity.
Move the pointer over any profile to preview its effect in your photo. Click the profile to apply it to your photo.
To add a profile to the Favorites profile group:
You can import third-party camera profiles in XMP format. Do the following:
In the Profile panel, click Browse.
Click the three-dot icon at the upper-right corner of the Profile panel. Then, select Import Profiles option from the pop-up menu.
In the Import Profiles dialog that appears, browse to the required path and select one or more XMP profiles.
Click Import.
Lightroom allows you to show or hide various profile groups that are displayed in the Profile browser - Adobe Raw, Camera Matching, Legacy, Artistic, B&W, Modern, Vintage, or any other profiles that you've imported.
To show/hide profile groups in Lightroom, follow the steps below:
Note:
Your settings to show/hide profile groups is specific to each computer or device. For example, you can hide some profile groups in Lightroom desktop but they will still be visible in Lightroom on your mobile device and vice versa.
Click () icon at the upper-right corner to bring up the Edit panel.
In the Profile panel at the top, click Browse.
Click the three-dot icon at the upper-right corner of the Profile panel. Then, select Manage Profiles option from the pop-up menu.
Under Manage, select the profile groups that you want to show in the Profile browser. Deselect the profile groups that you want to hide from the Profile browser.
Click Back to navigate back to the Profile browser.
Profile browser now displays only those profile groups which you've selected using the Manage Profiles option.
Adjust the tonal range of your image.
Using the slider controls provided in the Light panel, you can adjust the overall tonal range of your image.
In the Light panel, click the AUTO button to have Lightroom automatically apply the best edits for these slider controls in your photos: Exposure, Contrast, Highlights, Shadows, Whites, Blacks, Saturation, and Vibrance.
Exposure:
Controls the brightness of your photo. Move the slider to the left to make the image darker; move it to the right to make the image brighter.
Contrast:
Determines the contrast between light and dark colors. Move the slider to the left to flatten the contrast; move it to the right to make the contrast more dramatic.
Highlights:
Controls the brightness of the lighter parts of your photo. Move the slider to the left to darken highlights to recover details; move it to the right to brighten them and reduce details.
Shadows:
Controls the brightness of the lighter parts of your photo. Move the slider to the left to deepen shadows; move it to the right to brighten them and recover details.
Whites:
Sets the white point of the image. Move the slider to the right to make more colors appear completely white.
Blacks:
Sets the black point of the image. Move the slider to the left to make more colors appear completely black.
In Lightroom CC 1.4 (June 2018 release), the following changes have been introduced:
Going forward, the tone curves should be saved as a preset so that they can sync across the Lightroom ecosystem of apps. See this TechNote for detailed information.
The Tone Curve in the Light panel gives you greater control over the tonal range and contrast in your photo.
The horizontal axis represents the original tonal 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.
If a point on the curve moves up, it becomes a lighter tone; if it moves down, it becomes darker. A straight, 45-degree line indicates no changes to the tonal scale; the original input values exactly match the output values.
To make adjustments to the Tone Curve, click the curve and drag up or down. As you drag, the affected region and the new tonal value is displayed in the lower-right corner of the tone curve.
Using the slider controls in the Color panel, you can adjust colors in your image.
Temp:
Determines how cool or warm the colors appear in your photo. Move the slider to the left if colors are too yellow; move it to the right if colors are too blue.
Tint:
Determines how green or purple the colors appear in your photo. Move the slider to the left if colors are too purple; move it to the right if colors are too green.
Vibrance:
Increases the saturation of lower-saturated colors more than higher-saturated colors, which can help prevent skin-tones from looking unnatural.
Saturation:
Boosts the saturation of all colors equally. Move the slider to the left to de-saturate colors, move it to the right to boost saturation.
The Targeted Adjustment tool allows you to adjust the Tone Curve (in the Light panel) or the Color Mixer (in the Color panel) controls by directly dragging in the Photo. For example, you can drag left on a blue sky to decrease its saturation or drag right on a red object to intensify its hue.
To use the Targeted Adjustment tool:
If you're in Photo Grid () view or Square Grid (
) view, select a photo that you want to edit. Now, click (
) icon in the toolbar at the bottom to switch to Detail view.
If you're already in Detail () view, select a photo that you want to edit from the filmstrip appearing at the bottom of your current selection.
Click () icon at the upper-right corner to bring up the Edit panel.
In the Edit panel, do one of the following:
When the Targeted Adjustment tool is active, a floating toolbar appears at the bottom of your photo. In the toolbar, click the
or icons to switch between Tone Curve controls or Color Mixer controls respectively.
Adjust the Tone Curve using the Targeted Adjustment tool
The Targeted Adjustment tool allows you to make adjustments to the Parametric Curve and the Point Curve by dragging in the photo. You can also adjust the Point Curve for Red, Green, and Blue channels individually.
To adjust the tonal values using the Targeted Adjustment tool:
Adjust the Color Mixer using the Targeted Adjustment tool
The Targeted Adjustment tool adjusts specific colors sampled from the desired area where you drag the pointer, enabling you to adjust the hue, saturation, or luminance for the colors directly under the pointer.
To adjust colors using the Targeted Adjustment tool:
To close or turn off the Targeted Adjustment tool, click the cross (X) icon in the toolbar.
Apply effects to your image - Texture, Clarity, Dehaze, and Vignette
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:
Changes the contrast around the edges of objects in your photo. Move the slider to the left to soften edges; move it to the right to increase edge contrast.
Dehaze:
Move the slider to the left to add simulated haze; move it to the right to remove haze.
Vignette:
Makes the outer edges of the photo lighter or darker. Adjust the Vignette sliders:
Sharpen, reduce image noise, and apply film grain effects
Using the slider controls provided under the Detail panel, you can sharpen your photo to enhance edge definition and bring out detail, as well as remove image noise that can 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.
Sharpening:
Move the slider to the right to sharpen details.
Denoise
Automatically correct noisy images using AI-powered Denoise.
Noise Reduction:
Move the slider to the right to reduce luminance noise, manually.
Color Noise Reduction:
Move the slider to the right to reduce color noise.
Grain:
Move the slider to the right to add film grain.
Correct common camera lens issues.
Camera lenses can exhibit different types of defects at certain focal lengths, f-stops, and focus distances. You can correct and minimize these issues using the options provided in the Optics panel.
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.
Chromatic Aberration:
Select this option to automatically correct blue-yellow and red-green lateral fringes in your image.
Lightroom 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.
In the Optics panel, select the Enable Lens Corrections check box.
Lightroom automatically selects 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 displays the message 'Built-in Lens Profile Applied' in the Optics panel. Click the info icon to view Lens Profile information.
(Optional) If Lightroom is unable to find a matching lens profile automatically or if you want to change the automatic selection, 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.
If desired, customize the correction applied by the profile by using the following sliders:
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.
The Defringe controls help identify and remove color fringing along high-contrast edges. You can remove color fringes caused by longitudinal chromatic aberrations and reduce some of the colorful artifacts that the Remove Chromatic Aberration tool cannot remove. To use this tool, follow these steps:
In the Optics panel, click the Defringe icon at the upper-right corner to view the Defringe controls.
Depending on which hue you want to remove, select the purple or green radio button and click the Fringe Selector.
Hover over the desired hue in the photo and click it to suppress or remove it.
Alternatively, use the Amount slider to specify how much of the hue you want to suppress or remove and the Hue slider to specify the range of the selected hue.
Adjust geometric perspective in your 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. You can correct for these issues using the controls in the Geometry panel.
The Upright control provides four automatic perspective correction options - Auto, Level, Vertical, and Full, as well as a manual Guided option. After applying Upright, you can refine the adjustment using the Manual Transform sliders.
Choose a photo to correct.
(Recommended) In the Detail view, open the Edit control and navigate to the Optics panel. Select the Enable Lens Corrections check box.
Enabling lens corrections is highly recommended, before processing the photo with the Upright modes.
Navigate to the Geometry panel. From Upright menu, choose an option to apply the correction to the photo.
Guided:
Allows you to draw up to four guides on your photo to customize perspective correction.
Auto:
Corrects both vertical and horizontal perspective while balancing the overall image, preserving as much of the visible image area as possible.
Level:
Corrects horizontal perspective.
Vertical:
Corrects vertical perspective.
Full:
Combines all Upright correction types to automatically correct perspective.
Using Guided Upright Tool
If you chose the Upright mode as Guided, do the following:
1. Click the Guided Upright Tool icon and then draw the guides directly on your photo.
2. Once you have drawn at least two guides, the photo transforms interactively.
Cycle through the Upright modes until you find the most preferable setting.
All the Upright modes correct and manage 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.
(Optional) When correcting the perspective of a photo, you may get white areas near the image boundaries. To prevent this, select the Constrain Crop option to automatically crop the photo according to the original dimension.
Use Manual Transforms to fine-tune the perspective corrections - Distortion, Vertical, Horizontal, Rotate, Aspect, Scale, X Offset, Y Offset.
Lightroom 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.
If you're in Photo Grid () view or Square Grid (
) view, select a photo from which you want to copy the edit settings.
If you're in Detail () view, you can copy the edit settings from your current photo or choose the required photo from the filmstrip appearing at the bottom of your current selection.
Starting with the April 2023 release of Lightroom (version 6.3), you can also select the Copy Edit Settings option at the bottom of the screen to copy settings.
Copy all the edit settings from the selected photo.
To copy the current photo’s edit settings, do one of the following:
Choose which edit settings to copy from the selected photo.
To choose edit settings to copy from the selected photo:
Select one or more photos to which you want to paste the copied edit settings.
If you're in Photo Grid () view or Square Grid (
) view, select one or more photos to which you want to paste the edit settings.
If you're in Detail () view, select one or more photos from the filmstrip.
Paste the copied settings.
To paste the copied edit settings to the selected photos, do one of the following:
Open a photo in Detail view.
Select the Presets icon in the right panel.
Select from the following:
To preview the effect of a preset, hover over the thumbnail in the Presets panel. To apply a preset to the photo, simply click the preset.
You can create and save custom develop presets based on the current edit control settings (in the Edit panel) of the selected photo.
In Detail view, choose a photo based on which you want to create a preset and then select the Preset icon from the sidebar.
In the Presets panel, click the three-dots () icon and choose Create Preset from the pop-up menu.
In the New Preset dialog that appears, specify a name for your preset. Click Save.
The saved preset is added in the list of User Presets in the Presets panel.
If you're looking to migrate your Lightroom Classic develop presets into Lightroom, see Migrate Presets.
To update a saved user preset, do the following:
In the Detail view, select the Presets icon in the sidebar.
In the Presets panel, expand the User Presets group.
Select a user preset to apply it on the photo and then modify the edit settings (in the Edit panel) as required.
Now, right-click the user preset and select Update With Current Settings option in the pop-up menu.
You cannot delete built-in Lightroom presets. You can only delete the User Presets.
In the Detail view, select the Presets icon in the sidebar.
In the Presets panel, right-click a user preset and choose Delete from the pop-up menu.
In the Delete Preset dialog, click Delete to confirm the action. Otherwise, click Cancel.
Lightroom allows you to show or hide various preset groups that are displayed in the Presets panel.
Your settings to show/hide preset groups is specific to each computer or device. For example, you can hide some preset groups in Lightroom desktop but they will still be visible in Lightroom on your mobile device and vice versa.
Starting with the December 2022 release of Lightroom (version 6.1), you can also export Preset groups.
In the Detail view, select the Presets icon in the sidebar.
In the Presets panel, click the three-dots () icon and choose Manage Presets from the pop-up menu.
Under Manage, select the preset groups that you want to show in the Presets panel. Deselect the preset groups that you want to hide from the Presets panel.
Click Back to navigate back to the Presets panel.
Lightroom allows you to restore your edited photo to its original state (when you first imported it). You can also restore your photo edits to the state when last opened it Lightroom. To reset your photo edits, you must be in Detail view.
Open the photo in Detail view
If you're in Photo Grid () view or Square Grid (
) view, select an edited photo that you want to reset. Now, click (
) icon in the toolbar at the bottom to switch to Detail view.
If you're already in Detail () view, select the photo that you want to reset from the filmstrip appearing at the bottom of your current selection.
Restore the photo to its original state
Do one of the following:
Restore the photo to its last opened state
Do one of the following:
Work with the Healing tools to remove unnecessary spots, power lines, people, objects, red-eye, or other such distractions from a photo.
In the Loupe view, click the Healing panel icon on the right side of the screen.
Starting with the October 2022 release of Lightroom desktop, you can quickly remove unwanted objects and blemishes using the Content-Aware Remove tool.
Select one of the following Healing Brush tools:
Content-Aware Remove: Removes unwanted spots and fills the selection with generated content from the sampled 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 Content-Aware Remove tool uses the content from a custom source, 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.
Change the size, feather, or opacity of the selected Healing tool as necessary.
To change the sampled area that is selected by default, do one of the following:
To move and position the source or target area on the photo, drag the blue pin at the center of that area.
Healing options
Long press on the blue pin at the center of the target or source area to bring up the Healing Options context menu:
Circular spot:
Delete a selected area or spot:
Quickly correct red-eye in a photo with the Red Eye tool in the Healing panel. You can do one of the following:
Auto Correct red eye - Auto Correct option in the Red Eye tool automatically corrects red eye in a photo.
Correct red-eye manually - If you wish to manually correct red eye in a photo, click the Red Eye icon. Click and drag from the center of an eye to correct red eye. You can adjust the Pupil Size and Darken controls as preferred.
Starting from Lightroom 5.0 (October 2021 release), the following workflows no longer apply. To access the latest tools for local adjustments, see Masking in Lightroom.
Using the Brush, Linear Gradient, or Radial Gradient tools, you can make edits to specific areas in your photo. You can access these tools in the right panel in My Photos or Sharing view.
The Brush tool lets you selectively apply adjustments to photos by brushing onto the specific area of the photo.
The Linear and Radial Gradient tools let you apply adjustments across a region of a photo. You can make the region as wide or as narrow as you like.
Select a local adjustment tool. You can view the respective panel.
Make adjustments to the selected areas using these sliders in the panel:
The Hue slider is added starting from Lightroom 3.3 (June 2020 release). Hue allows you to easily recolor objects locally, as well as make more subtle adjustments such as fine-tuning skin tones, without impacting colors in the rest of your photo.
Move a slider to the left to decrease the value and to the right to increase the value.
Versions help you to quickly view and compare different edits made to the same photo. You can view automatically created Versions and also create Versions. Follow these steps to know how:
Open a photo in Detail view and apply the edits you like from the Edit panel.
Select the Versions icon in the sidebar.
In the Versions panel, select the Named tab. This tab lets you save your own Versions. The Auto tab, on the other hand provides a list of Versions that have been automatically saved for you from each editing session.
To create a Version in the Named tab, click Create Version, enter the name, and then click Create. A Version of your latest edits is added to the Named tab of the Versions panel. You can continue to apply more edits to your photo and create several Versions this way.
To view the edits in a Version, simply hover over a Version in the Named or Auto tab to see the preview in your photo.
In the Named tab, to rename or delete a Version, click the three-dot icon.
To save an Auto Version to the Named tab, click the three-dot icon next to the Version in the Auto tab and select Save as Named Version. You can also find an option to delete the Version from the three-dot menu.
Installing custom, third-party presets and profiles
For help instructions, see Import profiles.
If you're looking to migrate your Lightroom Classic develop presets into Lightroom, see Migrate Presets.
Install Lightroom on your desktop.
Launch Lightroom desktop.
When you launch Lightroom desktop (v1.4 June 2018 release or later) for the first time after installing or updating, the existing Lightroom Classic profiles and presets on your computer are automatically migrated to Lightroom.
(Optional) If you make any changes or add new presets to Lightroom Classic (after auto-migration to Lightroom desktop), do one of the following:
a. Migrate the new/updated presets to Lightroom manually
For Help instructions, see Migrate Presets.
b. Use the import dialog in Lightroom desktop
Make sure that the Lightroom app on your mobile device is updated to the latest version.
The presets and profiles that you've installed in Lightroom desktop will automatically sync with Lightroom on mobile.
From the menu bar, choose File > Import Profiles & Presets.
In the Import dialog that appears, browse to the required path and select profiles or presets that you want to import.
Click Import.
First, install the VSCO presets and profiles into Lightroom Classic.
VSCO preset packs include an installer that provides setup support for both Lightroom Classic and Lightroom.
Open Lightroom.
Manually import all VSCO camera profiles in Lightroom.
From the menu bar, choose File > Import Profiles & Presets.
In the Import dialog that appears, navigate to the path below and select the VSCO profiles that you installed in Step 1.
Win: C:\ProgramData\Adobe\CameraRaw\CameraProfiles
Mac: ~/Library/Application Support/Adobe/CameraRaw/CameraProfiles
Click Import.
When you launch Lightroom for the first time after updating to the latest version, the existing profiles on your computer are automatically added. If you want to install new XRite or DNG Profile Creator profiles after the first launch, do the following:
Save the profiles from XRite or DNG Profile Creator to your desktop.
Open Lightroom.
From the menu bar, choose File > Import Profiles & Presets.
In the Import dialog that appears, browse and select the profiles that you saved in Step 1.
Click Import.
In Lightroom, choose File > Import Profiles & Presets from the menu bar.
In the Import dialog that appears, navigate to the path below and select the profiles that you want to import.
Win: C:\ProgramData\Adobe\CameraRaw\CameraProfiles
Mac: ~/Library/Application Support/Adobe/CameraRaw/CameraProfiles
Click Import.
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