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Export settings

Explorer ,
Jan 19, 2022 Jan 19, 2022

I'm a complete novice when it comes to photography but particularly exporting photos. Can anyone give me some recommendations what are the best settings to used to export a raw photo to jpeg when I don't know what the final use of the photo will be. The photos won't be used for anything professional or large scale but I don't want to regret exporting photos to jpg, delete the raw file then regret my settings at a later date. I hope that makes sense. 

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correct answers 1 Correct answer

LEGEND , Jan 19, 2022 Jan 19, 2022

If you don't know what the intended use of the exported photo is, there is no such things a "best settings".

 

but I don't want to regret exporting photos to jpg , delete the raw file then regret my settings at a later date

 

The easy way to avoid this "regret" is to not delete the RAW. I think that's what most people do. In fact, if you don't have a use in mind for the exported JPG, why even bother to export it? You are just making extra work for yourself. Edit the photo and then leave it alone, un

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Adobe Employee ,
Jan 19, 2022 Jan 19, 2022

Hi there,

 

Please check this link and see if that helps: https://www.beart-presets.com/blog/convert-raw-to-jpg-in-lightroom

You may also take a look at this link for further information: https://helpx.adobe.com/lightroom-classic/help/exporting-photos-basic-workflow.html

 

Let us know if that helps.

 

Regards,

Tarun

 

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LEGEND ,
Jan 19, 2022 Jan 19, 2022

If you don't know what the intended use of the exported photo is, there is no such things a "best settings".

 

but I don't want to regret exporting photos to jpg , delete the raw file then regret my settings at a later date

 

The easy way to avoid this "regret" is to not delete the RAW. I think that's what most people do. In fact, if you don't have a use in mind for the exported JPG, why even bother to export it? You are just making extra work for yourself. Edit the photo and then leave it alone, un-exported until such time as you actually need the exported jpg for a specific purpose (and then, when you know the purpose, you can ask about what the best export settings are).

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Explorer ,
Jan 19, 2022 Jan 19, 2022
  • Hi, that's what I currently do actually, I don't export unless I know what the use will be. My photos are mainly photos of the family or holidays etc nothing major just memories. Unexported I feel if anything ever happened to lightroom as a software package in the future, my efforts would be wasted. Or if a family member looked back in years to come at the raw files who didn't know anything about lightroom the raw files would be unedited. 
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Community Expert ,
Jan 19, 2022 Jan 19, 2022

@gib39 wrote:

Hi, that's what I currently do actually, I don't export unless I know what the use will be. My photos are mainly photos of the family or holidays etc nothing major just memories. Unexported I feel if anything ever happened to lightroom as a software package in the future, my efforts would be wasted. Or if a family member looked back in years to come at the raw files who didn't know anything about lightroom the raw files would be unedited. 


 

You may be a novice, but you are thinking ahead…that is a wise question.

 

It is true that it’s good to have a version of your photos that is easy for others to open in any software, so it’s reasonable to export JPEG versions. Maybe not of all photos, but just the images that you think would be the most valued by your family.

 

A safe option would be, after editing and correction, to export those important images as JPEG, at a high quality level such as 75, at the full pixel dimensions of the original image, converted to the sRGB color profile, and including all metadata. Create an export preset of your settings, so that it is easy to repeat them at any time with more images.

 

(A JPEG quality level of 90 or higher is typically not needed. Above 80 or so, the file size starts to grow very quickly, but with no visible difference.)

 

If any of the scenarios you thought of do happen (Lightroom discontinued, family members don’t know what to do with raw files…), those JPEG versions would be of high enough quality and resolution that if someone has a more specific need in the future, anyone could use them for prints, or make smaller copies for the web or family sharing, with no special software needed.

 

And then also keep the raw versions in case you want to edit them later. Then you would just update the JPEG version.

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Explorer ,
Jan 19, 2022 Jan 19, 2022

Great suggestion I'll try this thanks 👍

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Community Expert ,
Jan 19, 2022 Jan 19, 2022

Raw files are much more valuable than jpgs; unlike jpgs, they contain all the information from the camera sensor.

They can be edited over and over with no quality loss, and since you're new to photography, you will probably want to re-edit them several times. So don't delete your raw files!

 

Unless you a need a jpg for a specific purpose, there is no need to export. When you do, the export should be tailored to the purpose of the exported file. If you're not happy with the result, you try a new export with different settings.

Once the jpg has served its purpose, you can delete it. 

 

Understanding how digital images work will make all this much easier.

I've written some articles that you may find useful.

 

What is a digital image?

File formats

Lightroom (Classic) basics

 

 

 

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Explorer ,
Jan 19, 2022 Jan 19, 2022

With a standard point and shoot the camera generates a jpg which for most people is small enough in file size but sufficient in quality to look at on a screen or print for a photo frame etc. My issue and I may be over complicating things but if I edit my raw files without exporting and lightroom then became discontinued then what? I would have edited loads of photos but wouldn't necessarily have the jpg to reflect the edit. With a point and shoot we don't necessarily have an end product in mind but what is produced is sufficient for most situation. Sorry its difficult to translate into words what my concerns are. 

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LEGEND ,
Jan 19, 2022 Jan 19, 2022

Lightroom makes so much money for Adobe, why would they discontinue it?

 

Even if you're thinking 20 years ahead, Adobe would be risking a huge amount of their business by abandoning a very popular product without any way for users to maintain their work. And even if an Adobe customer doesn't use Lightroom, they could still see what happened to Lightroom and stop purchasing Adobe products because whatever happened to Lightroom users will happen to them next.

 

The scenario of abandoning Lightroom is never going to happen.

 

 

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Explorer ,
Jan 19, 2022 Jan 19, 2022

Its highly unlikely but anything is possible in this world. But one scenario is what if I decided I couldn't afford to pay for lightroom any longer. 

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Community Expert ,
Jan 19, 2022 Jan 19, 2022

In that scenario, cancelling an Adobe subscription, Lightroom-Classic continues to work as an image database from which you can Export and Print. The Develop and Map modules cease to work.

 

I also TBMK believe that Adobe Bridge is still free for anybody to use,  and it is a powerful Image File Browser. If you Save Metadata to your RAW files as sidecar (XMP) files- Bridge can read and render your Lr-Classic editing of images, and at any time, and can Export JPGs from the RAWs.

 

Also most (if not all) camera manufacturers publish a RAW editor for their proprietary RAW files. Eg. Canon provides "Digital Photo Professional", Nikon provides "Nikon NX Studio". There are other editors, both free and purchased, that can edit RAW files, but most will not be able to render your LrC edit metadata saved in sidecar files.

 

 

 

Regards. My System: Windows-11, Lightroom-Classic 14.5.1, Photoshop 26.10, ACR 17.5, Lightroom 8.5, Lr-iOS 10.4.0, Bridge 15.1.1 .
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Community Expert ,
Jan 20, 2022 Jan 20, 2022

Quote “I also TBMK believe that Adobe Bridge is still free for anybody to use,  and it is a powerful Image File Browser. If you Save Metadata to your RAW files as sidecar (XMP) files- Bridge can read and render your Lr-Classic editing of images, and at any time, and can Export JPGs from the RAWs.”

LrC is an application within the Photography Plan subscription so if the user cancelled the subscription use of Photoshop and it's Camera Raw plugin needed to render raw files will also cease to function. I am not aware if Bridge can render raw files without Camera Raw.

 

Regards, Denis: iMac 27” mid-2015, macOS 11.7.10 Big Sur; 2TB SSD, 24 GB Ram, GPU 2 GB; LrC 12.5,; Lr 6.5, PS 24.7,; ACR 15.5,; (also Laptop Win 11, ver 24H2, LrC 14.5.1, PS 26.10; ) Camera Oly OM-D E-M1.
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Explorer ,
Jan 20, 2022 Jan 20, 2022

It's all complicated stuff this photography lark. 

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LEGEND ,
Jan 20, 2022 Jan 20, 2022
quote

Its highly unlikely but anything is possible in this world. But one scenario is what if I decided I couldn't afford to pay for lightroom any longer. 


By @gib39

 

If you are concerned that anything is possible ... well, how do you proceed with anything? You cannot guard against EVERY risk possible.

 

But as @Rob_Cullen says, your Lightroom Classic Library Module still works after the subscription ends.

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Explorer ,
Jan 20, 2022 Jan 20, 2022

I wasn't aware lightroom could still perform such tasks without a subscription. I guess for that piece of info alone my query was worth asking! 

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Community Expert ,
Jan 20, 2022 Jan 20, 2022
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"I wasn't aware lightroom could still perform such tasks without a subscription...."

It can, BUT ONLY AFTER having been a subscriber!  It is not possible to begin a 'trial', then not subscribe, and expect the database functions to continue working- they won't.

 

 

Regards. My System: Windows-11, Lightroom-Classic 14.5.1, Photoshop 26.10, ACR 17.5, Lightroom 8.5, Lr-iOS 10.4.0, Bridge 15.1.1 .
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