![]() Lightroom Classic has also promoted Profiles to be front and center along with DeHaze. The creative Profiles, logically, do have a larger, and more visible impact. These Profiles do not affect any of the sliders or other adjustments you've made or are planning to make, so they are really just a baseline starting point for whatever further image processing you do next. ![]() With most of the images I tried, all of the simple Adobe profiles other than Vivid (and of course Monochrome) were subtle. ![]() Of course, you can also use the standard Before/After previewing tools to see the difference on a larger image. While browsing you'll also see a thumbnail with a preview of how your image will look if you apply the profile. You can browse all the available profiles, and mark any that you want to have easily accessible as Favorites. Profiles can also be used to create a certain look either from a particular film, camera, or style. To make Profiles a lot more obvious, they have been moved to the top of the first tab in Adobe Camera Raw (Photoshop), and to the top of the Basic adjustment panel in Lightroom. In addition, expect plenty of third-party profiles to be added to the mix over time. Beyond that, there are lots of creatively oriented Profiles you can apply that Adobe has developed with a number of partners. Now, there is a new default Profile, Adobe Color, along with some other profiles with slightly different looks, including Adobe Landscape, Adobe Vivid, Adobe Portrait, and Monochrome. Adobe has always provided a number of Camera Profiles for most of the camera bodies it supports, including some that are designed to mimic the camera vendor's own looks, and the default Adobe Standard, that represented Adobe's generic idea of what looks reasonable. With the latest release of Creative Cloud, Adobe is changing that in a big way.Ĭonverting a RAW-format image into something you can edit requires an interpretation of the raw data. For users of Adobe's desktop photography applications, though, Profiles and Presets have had limited utility and been tucked away in inconvenient places. Made popular initially by mobile apps like Instagram and Snapseed, now they have spread to just about every photo app and sharing service. Besides the rapid rise of smartphones, no other trend has been as hot in photography as one-click filters to quickly give photos a particular look.
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