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58

P: Reflection Removal feedback (CR & LrClassic)

Adobe Employee ,
Nov 05, 2024 Nov 05, 2024

This post applies to Adobe Camera Raw plug-in.  

 

Adobe Camera Raw team is sharing an early look of our new Reflection Removal feature, which removes reflections caused by plate glass surfaces from photos. 

 

Note: 

  • The feature currently only works on raw photos. Support for JPEGs & HEICs is added in the April 24 Update.
  • There is a known issue on some Windows machines where the feature may produce a corrupt image. We are working on a fix for the upcoming release. 

 

Check out HelpX for more detailed usage information. For more technical information on the underlying technology, please refer to this Blog post. 

 

Getting started with the Reflection Removal feature: 

  • Make sure you have the “New AI Features and Settings Panel” Technology Preview enabled in the Camera Raw plug-in Preferences dialog (requires restarting the host application to activate). 
  • Go to the Remove panel [B] , and in the “Distraction Removal” section, click on the “Reflections” checkbox. 
  • Optionally adjust the slider after the ML model is done computing. 
  • Use the rest of the Camera Raw tools just like you would otherwise. 

When using the slider, the key values to note are: 

  • 0 – the input photo
  • 100 – de-reflected (window reflections removed) photo 
  • -100 – reflection photo (what the window was reflecting towards the camera) 

 

Please try the feature and share feedback in this community forum. It would help to include details like how you access Camera Raw (via Adobe Bridge or Photoshop), your computer system details, and as much information about what you like or do not like about the resulting photo quality. Our team will continually monitor this thread to track issues to improve the future experience. 

 

When to use Reflection Removal

The feature is designed to deal with large-area reflections when shooting through windows. Many other types of reflections occur in nature and are captured in photographs, but this feature may not recognize and handle those. We plan to work on expanding the supported reflection types in the future. 

 

Example use-cases for the feature include: 

  • Looking through windows inside-out (e.g., from the car, airplane, room windows, etc.) 
  • Looking through windows outside-in (e.g., shop windows) 
  • Museums (e.g., paintings behind glass, glass case exhibits, etc.) 

 

How best to use Reflection Removal

For best results, try the new feature following these suggestions: 

  • Apply Reflection Removal before applying any other edits to the photo, except for Enhance features such as Denoise
    • The changes made to the photo may be quite profound and render any changes you already made inappropriate.
    • If you plan to use both Enhance (Denoise, Super Resolution, or Raw Details) and Reflection Removal on a photo, it is better to apply Enhance first.
  • Play with the feature slider and adjust the removal strength as appropriate.
  • If you applied Adobe Adaptive (beta) profile prior to running the Reflection Removal feature, please update it or you may see traces of removed reflections still present in the photo (Adobe Camera Raw will remind you to do this).

 

Boris Ajdin: Product Manager, Emerging Products Group 


Update (01-16-2025)

 

To improve the performance and results of this feature, it is important that examples of images that are failing to properly remove the reflections are forwarded to the team via your report.  A large variety of file formats are allowed as attachments in these forum posts. The best option is to attach your image's raw file directly to your feedback post. Note that there is a 50 MB limit on an attachment's file size. If your raw file is too large to attach, the best option is to share the file via a file-sharing service (Dropbox or similar) and then share the link in your feedback post. Thank you for continuing to provide feedback on this Tech Preview!

If you have already shared your raw file with us - thank you!

 

~Rikk

Posted by:

Rikk Flohr: Adobe Photography Org
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correct answers 17 Correct answers

New Here , May 13, 2025 May 13, 2025

I think I figured it out - it was a reflection in a window in the background that  couldn't be removed. When I did a test shot through a window, it worked well. 

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Contributor , Jun 28, 2025 Jun 28, 2025

Are you sure you're using the 'best' setting and not 'preview'? Preview will certainly show you a blurry pic. But on certain images, reflection removal removes too much, and you get a muddle. Adjusting the intensity slider can help. 

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Community Expert , Jul 07, 2025 Jul 07, 2025

Removing eyeglass reflections is a goal Adobe mentioned in their blog post from last December (Removing window reflections in Adobe Camera Raw), so at least we know they’re interested in working on it. 

 

Adobe-remove-reflections-blog-post-eyeglasses.png

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Community Expert , Jul 07, 2025 Jul 07, 2025

Those results are consistent with a lot of the reports in this thread…it works fine on recent computers (for Macs, that means Apple Silicon M1 through M4 work great), but there seems to be a problem with the graphics drivers for the GPU in some Intel Macs, and this feature relies heavily on the GPU. Because Mac graphics drivers are supplied by Apple, it might need a macOS update to get fixed. But we never know exactly what Apple will fix in the next macOS update, so no guarantees.

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Contributor , Jul 20, 2025 Jul 20, 2025

Did you by any chance just use the 'preview' mode instead of the best mode? A lot of people have been making that error, and the preview mode is intentionally low res.

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Explorer , Aug 02, 2025 Aug 02, 2025

Seems Quality is on "preview". Try setting it on "best".

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Explorer , Aug 12, 2025 Aug 12, 2025

Eric,

do I understand it well the reflections will only be removed when the glass plate fills the whole frame of the picture. As it won't remove reflections from a windows that's part of a larger picture. 

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Explorer , Aug 14, 2025 Aug 14, 2025

I tried to cut part of the picture, so only a small part of the window remains. Feed only the small part to the reflection removal and paste it back into the original picture, using Photoshop. It's not perfect, but ..
I noticed doing this, the reflection feature reacts differently than using the entire picture. With the entire picture I can't get any reflection off either.

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Explorer , Aug 15, 2025 Aug 15, 2025

well Eric, since I tempory used the jpg picture kastalia67_s provided, I had to work in jpeg. I only shoot RAW and I only use Ps. Just wanted to see what it would do if I narrowed the view to just a part of that car window like it was one whole picture. And it did work. 
If I can use that technique with a RAW, the result can only be better.
Looking forward to see support for small panes of glass in RAW.

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Adobe Employee , Aug 15, 2025 Aug 15, 2025

FitzFoto, that suggestion will not work. That crop will not change the RAW result. To remove reflections from a cropped region you must convert the RAW image to a PNG/TIFF/JPEG.

 

Here is one workflow:

1. Open the image in Lightroom.

2. Make a virtual copy, and crop the virtual copy

3. Export the original and cropped image as TIFF files

4. Open the original and cropped TIFF in Photoshop

5. Use the Camera RAW filter to remove reflections from the cropped image

6. Copy the clean, cropped image int

...
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Adobe Employee , Aug 15, 2025 Aug 15, 2025

Kastalia, please precisely follow the steps I enumerated. It will work. There are other variants that will work, but not what you did. 

 

FitzFhoto, as you probably know, when you crop a RAW photo in Lr or ACR, the underlying image is not modified. Specifying a crop simply tells Lr/ACR how to render that RAW image onto your screen. The remove reflections tool operates before the crop is applied by Lr/ACR when your RAW is rendered onto your screen. Why? There is a long list of usability issues th

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Community Beginner , Aug 15, 2025 Aug 15, 2025

Hi Eric,
I just tested your steps, precisely.
Screen capture shows you a little reflection suppress in part of the girls face.
Well it is the best I could achieve up to now.

Here are the steps :

1. Open the image in Lightroom.

2. Make a virtual copy, and crop the virtual copy

3. Export the original and cropped image as TIFF files

4. Open the original and cropped TIFF in Photoshop

5. Use the Camera RAW filter to remove reflections from the cropped image

6. Copy the clean, cropped image into the original

7.

...
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Explorer , Aug 16, 2025 Aug 16, 2025

That explains, why it removed some of the reflections in my workflow. I didn't actually crop the picture. I marked the area, copied, created a new image and paste only that part. So, it had no other information of a larger picture when I applied the reflection removal.
Then I copied the result back to the original picture and aligned it.

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Community Expert , Aug 20, 2025 Aug 20, 2025

That’s expected…the feature is currently designed to remove reflections in a window filling the entire image frame between camera and subject. Eyeglasses only cover a small area of the frame so they aren’t handled yet. But in the original Adobe blog post announcing reflection removal, they did say they’d like to handle eyeglasses in a future update.

 

Since the blog post was published last December they did add support for some non-raw formats, extended the feature to Lightroom, and just introdu

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Community Expert , Sep 09, 2025 Sep 09, 2025

We can all see the reflections in the floor, but from what Adobe has said throughout this thread and in their blog post, the feature is currently designed to more clearly reveal what’s showing behind the reflections in a large transparent glass window covering the entire frame. Although they might cover more use cases later.

 

Removing the reflections from the floor with the current version of this feature wouldn’t be expected to reveal anything behind the floor, because the floor isn’t supposed

...
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Explorer , Sep 15, 2025 Sep 15, 2025

Not always, but it's better on RAW pictures as they contain more detail information.
But if the glass plate with the reflection doesn't cover the whole image, it doesn't work on RAW either.

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Community Expert , Oct 05, 2025 Oct 05, 2025

This reply, earlier in this thread, explains why:

https://community.adobe.com/t5/camera-raw-discussions/p-reflection-removal-feedback-cr-amp-lrclassic/m-p/15405349#M28971

 

Also, it isn’t called “glare reduction.”

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replies 1152 Replies 1152
New Here ,
Jun 19, 2025 Jun 19, 2025

I was very glad to see that this is now available in LRC so I tried to remove the reflection of the window but it did not work well! So I am bit disappointed!

 

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Adobe Employee ,
Jun 23, 2025 Jun 23, 2025

Is this a RAW image that you tested?

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Community Beginner ,
Jun 20, 2025 Jun 20, 2025

Nope. Not working on my iMac either.

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New Here ,
Jun 21, 2025 Jun 21, 2025

Reflection Removal NOT working on my 2019 MacPro w/Intel Processor.

 

Going through many posts on Adobe's Community, I seem to be having the same problem that many PC users running Intel processors, as well as older Macs with Intel processors have reported going back to December 12, 2024! I just tried my 2021 MacBook Pro with the M1 Max chip and reflection removal appears to work as intended. My problem is only occurring on my 2019 MacPro with with a 3.3 GHz 12-Core Intel Xeon W.

This has been an obvious and well-reported issue since last December (obviously using ACR). I'm VERY surprised Adobe would release this update to Lightroom Classic without fixing this hardware conflict that they have been aware of for 6 months!

 

Does anyone know of a fix or workaround?

 

Alan Sislen

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Adobe Employee ,
Jun 23, 2025 Jun 23, 2025

Remove reflections will work best on newer hardware. Older systems might experience issues like these, which result from the hardware driver software.

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New Here ,
Jun 20, 2025 Jun 20, 2025

Is there a way to apply this to reflections in eyeglasses?

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New Here ,
Jun 21, 2025 Jun 21, 2025

YES! I wish there was some kind of spot removal instead of it applying to the entire image and just guessing what we want it to do.

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Participant ,
Jun 20, 2025 Jun 20, 2025

Picture is from a boat, looking through the glass sides

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New Here ,
Jun 21, 2025 Jun 21, 2025

Running on a MacBook Pro (2019 15" with 32GB ram) and MacOS 15.5. Madea total hash of a JPG 

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Adobe Employee ,
Jun 23, 2025 Jun 23, 2025

This is a hardware issue. This tool will work best on more recent hardware.

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New Here ,
Jun 21, 2025 Jun 21, 2025

Made a hideous mess of an image of fish swimming in swallow water.

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Explorer ,
Jun 21, 2025 Jun 21, 2025

While I have had good luck with reflections removal on some images, it is consistently failing on images from this museum.  The photo was taken with a Canon R5M2 using compressed raw.  I tried it both with the original raw image and with one that had been processed to a jpg.  The light in the museum was decidedly yellow and the reflections are on the inside of the demonstration case.  
I have circled the reflections.  This image has been downsized to allow it to be emailed.

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New Here ,
Jun 21, 2025 Jun 21, 2025

This tool works great, except if there are string lights--they get erased, too. It would be nice to have the option to select specific areas that you wanted reflections removed or not.

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Community Expert ,
Jun 22, 2025 Jun 22, 2025

@Rikk Flohr: Photography I tried the new feature with several images of mine and got mixed results. This one surprised me though, as I would compare it to the Swiss village in the blog post. But the relfection removal did not work in this example. Just to give you more feedback. From top to bottom: the original image, after reflection removal (area marked in yellow with removed reflection), the reflection. Photo taken from inside a gondola at the Centennial Wheel in Chicago. Done in Camera Raw 17.4.0.2272 and PS 28.6.0

Bildschirmfoto 2025-06-22 um 15.28.00.pngBildschirmfoto 2025-06-22 um 15.28.14.pngBildschirmfoto 2025-06-22 um 15.28.56.png




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Adobe Employee ,
Jun 23, 2025 Jun 23, 2025

Are these RAW photos?

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Community Beginner ,
Jun 23, 2025 Jun 23, 2025

No, this is a JPEG from a client's iPhone.

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Adobe Employee ,
Jun 23, 2025 Jun 23, 2025

I would suggest using RAW photos with this tool. JPEG images have been compressed in a variety of ways that make removal more difficult. Note that iPhones can capture RAW.

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New Here ,
Jun 22, 2025 Jun 22, 2025

I have an image where a quarter of it is a shop window. When using the reflection removal tool it makes no difference to window reflection, If I slide the percentage bar from the 100% to 0% the whole image gradually turns to a solid black

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Adobe Employee ,
Jun 23, 2025 Jun 23, 2025

This tool might not remove reflections on windows that are only 1/4 of the view because such windows are usually part of the subject, rather than blocking you from viewing your subject. Please consider posting an example if you have further questions.

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New Here ,
Jun 22, 2025 Jun 22, 2025

Didn't work on my image.  I waited ~15 minutes and it didn't really look any differently.  Mine was a pastry booth in Norway.  It had glass in the front that obscured the lady working in the booth.  

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New Here ,
Jun 22, 2025 Jun 22, 2025

So far in about 3 attempts to use the reflection removal tool in Lightroom, it does nothing or makes the image worse.  All of these attempts have been shooting at objects behind a window (outside looking in). Attached is one example that I thought would have been a good case for removal..

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Adobe Employee ,
Jun 23, 2025 Jun 23, 2025

I don't see an example attached. 

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Explorer ,
Jun 22, 2025 Jun 22, 2025

I am continuing to find images which fail on the Reflections removal.  The image just prior to this one worked well, but this was a total fail.  Both images were taken with Canon R5M2.  Both had this yellow coloration, but the one that worked was less yellow.  Both were taken with compressed raw and worked both as jpgs and as original.  Both had the reflections inside the museum case, so I don't know what made the difference.  The reflections are circled.

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Adobe Employee ,
Jun 23, 2025 Jun 23, 2025

Have you tried capturing RAW?

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Explorer ,
Jun 22, 2025 Jun 22, 2025

I was testing what might make the Reflections work better.  It appears that if the light and contrast are raised prior to trying reflection removal, it works better.  The images have been downsized and flattened for sending.  You can see the stepwise trials 1 to 4

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