This is the one Adobe sneak-peeked, and it’s actually pretty darn slick, and anyone who shoot underwater photography, or takes shot at an aquarium, or just shoots on hazy days will so love this. OK, that’s the big stuff for Lightroom on your mobile device. Just tap on screen and drag the curve up or down, and you can drag the sliders underneath the curve the same way.Īnother new feature:  now you can add videos you took on your camera or tablet add them to LR Mobile, and they will sync back to your Desktop Lightroom. Note: I put the thin white box around it is just to make it easier for you to see — there isn’t an outline around it — it just blends right in nicely. I honestly did not expect to see this one here so soon, but it is, and it’s very cleverly implemented — right on screen. Glad to see them here (you access them the same way — swipe up/down on the row of Adjustment Tiles). You just click and drag the HSL sliders where you want them, right on screen.Ĭoming straight to you from the Effects panel in the Develop Module, it’s the same controls that do the same thing. This is a mobile version of the HSL panel, and also, check out the on-screen controls for adjusting each individual color (you can do it even after you convert to black and white as seen here). You know it, you love it, you can’t live without it, and now it’s in Lightroom Mobile’s Adjust panel: Just swipe upward on the tiles and you’ll see all three new features (note the little icon on the far left that lets you know which set of controls you’re seeing. We’ll start with the Lightroom for your Mobile Device stuff, because they’re pretty substantial: First, they added three Develop Module features from Lightroom Desktop to the mobile version, and they implemented them in a very clever way (from a User Interface standpoint). NOTE: these new features are only available in Lightroom CC — they will not be added to Lightroom 6 (as RC and I mentioned to death at the initial launch just a few months ago). They introduced a very cool new feature (which Adobe already kind of “sneak peekedâ€) for Lightroom on the Desktop, and they made a big improvement to one of its existing features.
The plug-in should be installed and added to the list of installed plug-ins on the left of the Plug-in Manager window. The main part of the Plug-in Manager window shows details of the selected plug-in and should show “Status: This plug-in is enabled.Big news for Lightroom CC users — Adobe just announced the 2015 Release of the Creative Cloud, and in it came some very awesome new features for Lightroom Mobile, and for Lightroom on the desktop. Click the Add button at the lower left and navigate to the LRPlugins folder, select the LRHazeFilters.lrplugin folder and click the Select Folder button. Now open Lightroom, click on the File menu and select Plug-in Manager… – the “Lightroom Plug-in Manager” window should open. The location can be changed but you must have a folder named LRHazeFilters.lrplugin containing the four.
Next unzip the plug-in so the LRHazeFilters.lrplugin folder is created in LRPlugins, and the files a, a, a and a are in the LRHazeFilters.lrplugin folder. Create a folder under Documents named LRPlugins (or something similar). These notes are for Windows.įirst you need somewhere to store the plug-in. If you have not installed a plug-in in Lightroom, here are some notes to help.