Lightroom integrates brilliantly with Photoshop for more complex adjustments. When you create and save a layered image in Photoshop, say, it's saved back to Lightroom as the layered image. When you re-open it in Photoshop later, all the layers are still there. So although many users will be relieved that Lightroom 6 will still be available on a regular perpetual licence, it's getting harder and harder to find an economic argument against swapping to Adobe's subscription service.
Jan 08, 2016 My estimate is that Mac outnumbers Windows by 2:1. This is based on visitor statistics to my Lightroom site which show 51% Mac, 25% Windows (the balance is 20% iOS and 3% Android). This 2:1 ratio is consistent with the trend which had been steadily climbing from 50% the first time I looked to above 60% in mid 2013. Difference Between Photoshop vs Lightroom Photoshop. Photoshop which is also commonly known as Adobe Photoshop is a software which is used to edit and create customizable graphics inputs, texturing for 3D Models using 3D software’s like Maya or 3D Max, edit photos, create flyers, banners, and images for print media as well as for the web media.
You have to remember that you're not just getting Lightroom but all the Creative Cloud ancillary services too, such as the ability to synchronise Collections with the Lightroom app on your tablet, and showing the same Collections as online web galleries that others can view. Adobe says that Lightroom 6/CC also runs faster than its predecessor, though any improvements weren't obvious in our tests. We timed both versions while carryout out a set of routine tasks and the results were inconclusive.
Lightroom 6 was a couple of seconds slower to launch, but it was a fresh installation so it was probably still caching library files. It did seem to be around 10% faster at importing a folder of images (600, in both JPEG and raw formats), but slower at rendering previews (Standard and Smart). It was around 15% faster at exporting 10 images as full-resolution JPEGs, though. Lightroom 6 can now use your computer's GPU (Graphics Processing Unit), though apparently this has most effect when carrying out processor-intensive editing tasks. This proved difficult to test because editing effects in Lightroom are typically quick to render anyway, so perhaps some more investigation is need to find some particularly taxing processes. We liked Lightroom very nearly gives you the best of everything. It's a fast and powerful image organising and cataloguing tool which can also print images, turn them into slideshows and publish web galleries straight to your web server.
Its editing tools just get more and more powerful with each version, and each time they do it reduces the time you need to spend in programs like Photoshop – in fact, you can find yourself processing, enhancing and finishing whole folders full of images entirely within Lightroom. It also has powerful editing tools that could save you having to use Photoshop at all. Adjustments can be saved as presets and applied to other photos with a single click.
While there's still resistance amongst some users to the idea of subscription-based software, the price you pay for the Photography Plan gets you Lightroom CC and Photoshop CC and free updates to both in the future. We disliked Lightroom still has some quirks which you might not notice if this is your first full-power image cataloguing tool, but if you're an Aperture user on a Mac who's been forced to migrate to Lightroom, there will be a few things which grate. One of these is the way that Folders and Collections are entirely separate. It's like having two parallel but separate filing systems. If you pick out some pictures within a folder to make a Collection, that Collection appears in an entirely separate panel. Annoyingly, while you can group related images in Folders or Collections, top, they only stay grouped in that location.
If you add one of the group to another Collection, there's no indication it's been grouped with the others. Another is Lightroom's stacking system. You can group related images together, such as shots taken in a sequence, for example, or different edits of the same image, but that grouping only exists within the Folder or Collection you created it in.
If you look at the same photo in a different collection, it's not grouped with those same images, but could be ungrouped, or grouped with a different set of images. Lightroom's grouping feature can be useful, but it would be more useful still if it was consistent across your whole library.
Verdict It's not difficult to find reasons for recommending Lightroom – in fact, it's hard to find reasons not to. If you're a photography enthusiast, expert or professional you need software which can organise, output and enhance your pictures and, with a few minor quibbles and gripes, Lightroom does that perfectly. It's true that you'll still need a full-blown editor for more complex tasks involving layers, masks and complex image-manipulation processes, but if you subscribe to Adobe's Photography Plan you get that too, in the form of Photoshop CC. In fact, Lightroom and Photoshop work so well together that it's as if they were designed that way. You don't have to use Photoshop with Lightroom. You can configure any other image-editing program to work as an external editor in just the same way.
And all the top plug-in makers now produce Lightroom versions of their tools, so you can use them directly without having to switch to Photoshop first. So do you choose Lightroom 6, the one-off perpetual licence version, for £104/US$149/AU$176, or opt for the subscription-based Lightroom CC + Photoshop CC Adobe Photography Plan at £102/US$120/AU$120?
![Mac Mac](https://cdn.photographylife.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/PC-vs-Mac-650x400.png)
You may not like the idea of subscriptions, but if you go for the perpetual licence then in a year, or two years, when a new version of Lightroom comes out, you'll have to pay for the upgrade, when Creative Cloud subscribers will get it for nothing.