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Little 'eye' is new to me, applies a 'preset' I do not want when I make a copy of the image

Advisor ,
Apr 22, 2025 Apr 22, 2025

All updated versions of everything. This 'eye' when clicked on changes the image to some sort of preset. I don't know how to neautralize the preset as I only want to make a copy of the image to work on and keep the original as it is when viewed in the filmstirp. How do I make 'no change' when I want to make an image copy to work on? TIA, Ken

Screenshot 2025-04-22 at 8.11.58 PM copy.jpg

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correct answers 1 Correct answer

Community Expert , Apr 22, 2025 Apr 22, 2025

The (eye) icon is an indicator that there have been edits made in the panel where you see a bright-white 'eye'

A grey 'eye' indicates nothing in that panel has been adjusted.

If you click on the white 'eye' then it temporarily disables the adjustments in that one panel (and not other panels).

Clicking on a white 'eye' does not hide or cancel adjustments made in any other panels- so you will still see the effects of other panels, including adjustments that might have been made by a develop prese

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Advisor ,
Apr 22, 2025 Apr 22, 2025

I found this online but there is not choice for photo then 'develop settings' Maybe this is left over from an older version of Lightroom... I have no idea. When I set copy info to 'none' it still copes with strange settings like a preset is active. When I click on the 'eye' icon it shows the applied preset or wahtever it is that is changing the image.

In Lightroom Classic, to find the copy settings for an image, go to the Develop module or the Library module. From there, select "Photo - Develop Settings - Copy Settings" to choose which settings to copy. Once you've selected the desired settings, click "Copy". 
 
 

 

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Community Expert ,
Apr 22, 2025 Apr 22, 2025

The (eye) icon is an indicator that there have been edits made in the panel where you see a bright-white 'eye'

A grey 'eye' indicates nothing in that panel has been adjusted.

If you click on the white 'eye' then it temporarily disables the adjustments in that one panel (and not other panels).

Clicking on a white 'eye' does not hide or cancel adjustments made in any other panels- so you will still see the effects of other panels, including adjustments that might have been made by a develop preset.

2025-04-23 14_42_33-Roberts Catalog-v14 - Adobe Photoshop Lightroom Classic - Develop.jpg

If you want to 'keep an original' version of your image visible in the filmstrip (or Grid view)  then you should be using Virtual copies. You can work on a virtual copy and leave the 'original' untouched. And you can always [Reset] an image to delete all edits made.

 

 

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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Advisor ,
Apr 22, 2025 Apr 22, 2025

Good, thank you and I will study as it sounds straightforward. I think I am making a virtual copy using comman ' (single quote) on a mac. Had not touched the virtual copy but the white eye appeared. I will be more careful now that I see that what you say is working and I may have missed a 'touch' that I did on the image, I'm sure it would have noticed anything that reflected a change. Thanks Rob. Souds like I just need to settle in and pay attention a bit more carefully.

 

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Community Expert ,
Apr 23, 2025 Apr 23, 2025

If you create a virtual copy, then that copy inherits all settings that are applied to the original. I'm not 100% sure, but I think the Basic panel eye is always active, because the Basic panel includes the profile and no image in Lightroom has no profile. That would mean this will apply to that virtual copy too.

 

-- Johan W. Elzenga
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Enthusiast ,
Apr 23, 2025 Apr 23, 2025

The 'Eye' in the Basic panel is dimmed when the photo is in its default settings state, i.e. as if it has been Reset. So, no, the 'Eye' in the basic panel is not always highlighted.

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LEGEND ,
Apr 23, 2025 Apr 23, 2025
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And if you want to "permanently" turn off the edits in a panel, hold the Alt button down, the eye will turn into an up-down toggle, slide the toggle down, and you will see this, an eye with a slash, meaning the edits from this section have been "permanently" turned off (without you having to hold the mouse button down on the eye)

 

dj_paige_0-1745400506465.png

 

 

And if you want to return this eye icon to normal, just repeat the process but slide the toggle up. Which is why I put the word permanently in quotes, you can always undo it; so its permanent until you decide to undo it.

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