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Participant
February 15, 2017
Answered

Lightroom changes exposure of pictures when they are clicked

  • February 15, 2017
  • 3 replies
  • 11588 views

Hi there,

I've been working with Lightroom (currently 5.7) for a long time but these last few months I noticed something really annoying, and I don't understand whats going on.

Whenever I import a bunch of photo's from my Canon 6D and import them in Lightroom, and I am working in the Develop mode, the pictures change very often (not always) as soon as I click on them in the row at the bottom.

The picture preview above looks okay for a second and then something happens as if the exposure goes down, making the look of the picture worse every time, so my guess is that the original look is the correct one....

It seems as if some kind of preset is done even though I dont do anything.

Did I enable some kind of auto-correction on the pictures or something?

Marcel

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer JP Hess

I don't think so. If these are images that were just imported then Lightroom is displaying the embedded JPEG preview that includes all of the in-camera settings that have been applied. Lightroom does not read those settings. As soon as Lightroom imports raw images it displays that JPEG image until it has time to generate the preview of the raw image data. So if you haven't given Lightroom time to generate raw previews you would experience what you are describing.

3 replies

Participant
May 28, 2022

THIS IS THE WORST! It ruins the workflow, adds hours of time to the shoot processing. I'm so frustrated myself. I have this  on video. It vanishes so quickly its like it isnt happening. Ive had this issue for years.

 

TheDigitalDog
Inspiring
May 28, 2022

@Sarah24641405dvlv wrote:

THIS IS THE WORST! It ruins the workflow, adds hours of time to the shoot processing. I'm so frustrated myself. I have this  on video. It vanishes so quickly its like it isnt happening. Ive had this issue for years.

 


This is a five year old post (with a correct and accurate answer) so what exactly is your problem with Lightroom Classic? 

Author “Color Management for Photographers" & "Photoshop CC Color Management/pluralsight"
JP Hess
Inspiring
May 29, 2022

Things have changed dramatically (in my opinion) since this thread began years ago. Now, if you want your images to import and look more the way you expect them to look, you can set your own defaults more effectively than you could previously. I like to suggest users watch and implement the techniques taught in this tutorial. It works well for me, and provides an excellent starting point for new imports for my work.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XGCnR9qEqA4&t=29s 

elie_dinur
Participating Frequently
February 16, 2017

"...it's just strange that I havent noticed this before, maybe I wasn't paying enough attention to it!"

Maybe you have changed your camera settings; for instance turned on Auto Light Optimization or Highlight Tone Priority. Maybe you set a different Picture Style, switched it from the flatter ones like Neutral or Faithful to a "jazzier" P.S. like Standard or Landscape. Or changed the custom parameters of a P.S., sharpening, contrast, saturation and hue. These image characteristics are all products of the processing the camera does in order to make jpgs and they are not inherent in the Raw data. Lightroom does not do them by default nor does it automatically read metadata notations and try to recreate camera processing. It does its own Adobe processing and Adobe's opinion about what makes for a good default starting point for Raw editing and the camera maker's (Canon, in this case) opinion about what makes for a good looking and camera-selling jpg are likely to be quite different.

Nevertheless, as Jim has indicated, you can change LR's defaults to accord more with your own desired starting point. Change the default camera profile from Adobe Standard to one of the reverse-engineered imitations of Canon's profiles, for a start. Just remember that Adobe processing is not Canon processing and they never can be entirely identical. Personally, I like what I can do with Adobe tools; if I wanted to recreate Canon processing, I would use the software provided with the camera.

JP Hess
JP HessCorrect answer
Inspiring
February 15, 2017

I don't think so. If these are images that were just imported then Lightroom is displaying the embedded JPEG preview that includes all of the in-camera settings that have been applied. Lightroom does not read those settings. As soon as Lightroom imports raw images it displays that JPEG image until it has time to generate the preview of the raw image data. So if you haven't given Lightroom time to generate raw previews you would experience what you are describing.

Participating Frequently
February 16, 2017

This is the standard answer for explaining the change in appearance of images as they are opened in Lightroom but one of the aspects of this explanation that seems perplexing is that Lightroom takes, sometimes considerable, time generating previews when images are imported (and one can see subtle changes to the thumbnails as this happens). But when images are opened up (in Develop module) there is another change in appearance. It seems simplistic to suggest that Lightroom is ignoring all the previews previously generated and starting all over with the embedded jpeg. If so what is the point of generating previews on import?

Participating Frequently
February 18, 2017

LR always uses the operating system default, but apparently its CM uses the profile differently than, for instance, Photoshop. I have seen numerous cases, over the years, in which LR acted as though the profile was corrupted although other applications, including PS, had no problem with it. Often recalibrating the monitor was the solution - or calibrating/profiling instead of relying on a maker supplied "canned" profile.


Thanks for the useful insights.