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Participant
July 3, 2017
Answered

Lightroom performance is so poor.

  • July 3, 2017
  • 2 replies
  • 571 views

It seems like no matter what I do the performance is always horrible. I have my photos feeding off my SSD. And yes my computer is extremely well  maintained. All my drivers are up to date aswell. I play games all the time at 60-140fps. There is no reason that lightroom should feel and react so sluggish. Am I missing something here?

Specs

120hz 1ms Response monitor
3770k OC
980GTX

http://i.imgur.com/cGrnLfO.png

http://i.imgur.com/fgFQwM9.png

    This topic has been closed for replies.
    Correct answer dj_paige

    This is a known deficiency in Lightroom, that brushing and spot healing can be slow, particularly if you do a lot of brushing or if your original photos are very large in pixels or megapixels, or both. Since your monitor is 1920x1080, make sure you have turned OFF the GPU acceleration (go to Preferences, click on Performance, then uncheck "Use Graphics Processor".

    Another thought that might speed this up: Do the brushing in LR as the next to last editing step, and as the last step (if needed) turn on any lens corrections and transformations

    If you are going to do a lot of brushing and/or a lot of spot healing, then you might want to consider doing this in Photoshop or Photoshop Elements, where it will be done a lot faster.

    2 replies

    dj_paige
    Legend
    July 4, 2017

    Could you explain EXACTLY what Lightroom actions are slow?

    Armando.RAuthor
    Participant
    July 4, 2017

    Thanks wobertc, went through it. As for what is slow, using a a tablet for brushing is slow, and how long it takes effects to reflect on the image are slow aswell.

    dj_paige
    dj_paigeCorrect answer
    Legend
    July 4, 2017

    This is a known deficiency in Lightroom, that brushing and spot healing can be slow, particularly if you do a lot of brushing or if your original photos are very large in pixels or megapixels, or both. Since your monitor is 1920x1080, make sure you have turned OFF the GPU acceleration (go to Preferences, click on Performance, then uncheck "Use Graphics Processor".

    Another thought that might speed this up: Do the brushing in LR as the next to last editing step, and as the last step (if needed) turn on any lens corrections and transformations

    If you are going to do a lot of brushing and/or a lot of spot healing, then you might want to consider doing this in Photoshop or Photoshop Elements, where it will be done a lot faster.

    Rob_Cullen
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    July 4, 2017
    Regards. My System: Windows-11, Lightroom-Classic 15.1.1, Photoshop 27.3.1, ACR 18.1.1, Lightroom 9.0, Lr-iOS 10.4.0, Bridge 16.0.2 .