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Inspiring
September 8, 2025
Answered

Google Pixel 10 DNG's are treated as JPGs?

  • September 8, 2025
  • 1 reply
  • 552 views

It appears DNG photos taken on the recently released Pixel 10 mobile phone are being treated as JPEGs by Lightroom Classic in the Develop module.  In  the profile section, the full range of profiles are not available, ie Landscape, Portrait,  Adobe Colour, Standard, Vivid etc. What's available is Adaptive Colour, B&W and  Google Pixel Monochrome.

Is this correct? The same thing happened on DNG photos taken on the Pixel 9, that was soon corrected, I'm not sure whether Adobe solved it or Google. 

 I have tried to attach a DNG photo, but the uploader says the DNG is not a supported file type!

Correct answer johnrellis

Indeed, the Pixel 10 is not on the supported-cameras list:

https://helpx.adobe.com/camera-raw/kb/camera-raw-plug-supported-cameras.html

 

Since its raws are encoded as DNGs, LR knows how to edit them, but Adobe has not yet provided the camera profiles Adobe Standard, Adobe Color, etc. (part of what makes a cameara "supported").

1 reply

JohanElzenga
Community Expert
Community Expert
September 8, 2025

If Adaptive color is available, then I think the images are not treated as JPEG but as raw DNG. It seems Adobe did not yet create the other profiles, or there is some other problem with those profiles (maybe the DNG is not fully compatible). Can you set the Temperature in degrees Kelvin? That's another indication for raw.

 

-- Johan W. Elzenga
John1957Author
Inspiring
September 8, 2025

Thanks for the reply, it seems that I might  be jumping the gun...Adobe has not yet created these profiles for the camera? the temperature setting is in degrees Kelvin, so they are being seen as Raw files. Time will tell!

Thanks once again.

johnrellis
johnrellisCorrect answer
Legend
September 9, 2025

Indeed, the Pixel 10 is not on the supported-cameras list:

https://helpx.adobe.com/camera-raw/kb/camera-raw-plug-supported-cameras.html

 

Since its raws are encoded as DNGs, LR knows how to edit them, but Adobe has not yet provided the camera profiles Adobe Standard, Adobe Color, etc. (part of what makes a cameara "supported").