Skip to main content
John Lastar
Inspiring
October 9, 2021
Answered

LRC won't open raw files in adobe camera raw

  • October 9, 2021
  • 4 replies
  • 4259 views

Recently when I try open a raw file in PS from LRC it doesn't open in camera raw. Also, the block where I could check to open a copy or the original is gone. I can still open in camera raw from my HD but it kind of defeats the purpose of LR.

Is this somethin new or did I accidently delete something.

In my preferences I checked prefer camera raw for supported files.

Im using win 10 and it's up to date as are all my adobe files.

Cameras are Nikons and I pretty much only shoot in raw.

Suggestions would be appreciated.

Thank you,...

Correct answer elie_dinur
  1. In the ACR Preferences (accessible from either PS or Bridge) there is a dialog box on the second page, “File Handling”, which can be set to “Automatically open all supported TIFFs” (or “JPGs”). In this event any Tiff or Jpg sent from LRC to PS will immediately and automatically be opened in ACR. In cases where LRC and PS are not parallel releases, LRC will send the original Tiff (if that is selected in the verification box) with the above result.
  2. If a Raw file is sent from LRC as a “Smart Object”, double-clicking on the layer thumbnail will cause it to open in ACR.

4 replies

Rob_Cullen
Community Expert
Community Expert
October 10, 2021

Here is my interpretation of Edit-In Photoshop: If you care to read 🙂

 

MAKING SENSE OF [EDIT IN PHOTOSHOP] FROM LR-CLASSIC

All discussion following assumes that the Versions of Lightroom-Classic and Photoshop are on a par with corresponding Camera Raw versions.

 

1) A RAW image in the Lr-CLASSIC Catalog- (NEF, CR3, ARW, etc)

 

a)           [Edit-in] Photoshop will immediately open the image in the Photoshop ‘document’ window using, and automatically applying,  the edits applied in Lightroom-CLASSIC.

The ACR UI does NOT open.

 

b)            [Open as Smart Object in Photoshop]  will open the image in the Photoshop ‘document’ window using, and automatically applying,  the edits applied in Lightroom-CLASSIC, AND create the Ps Background image layer (with the Smart Object badge) that, if [double-clicked] will open the image in the ACR Interface.

 

2) A ‘RASTER’ IMAGE FILE-  (TIFF, JPG, PNG, etc)

 

a)            [Edit In] Photoshop- will always ask by presenting the “What to Edit” dialog-

 

Each of the three options show (in fine text) exactly how the selected raster image file will be treated when [Edit] is selected from this dialog.

Again- The ACR UI does NOT open.  (***Except – see Notes!)

 

b)            The Lightroom-CLASSIC command [Open as Smart Object in Photoshop] avoids the “What to Edit” dialog and treats the image as it does for RAW image files in 1) b) above.

 

***NOTES:

 In Photoshop CAMERA RAW PREFERENCES- it is possible (in Photoshop v22.5.1) to set the preference for “JPEG and TIFF Handling” as in this example-

Options are set to “Automatically open all supported  JPEGs” and “Automatically open all supported TIFFs

 

NOW the Lightroom-CLASSIC dialog with three options  for “What to Edit” for a JPG or TIF changes the workflow!!!

[Edit a Copy with Lightroom Adjustments] opens the image in the Document window with Lightroom-CLASSIC Develop edits. NO ACR interface.

[Edit a Copy] and [Edit OriginalWILL open the ACR interface before the image is then ‘opened’ in the Document window.

 

Wrap you brain around all that…!!!

Regards. My System: Windows-11, Lightroom-Classic 15.0, Photoshop 27.0, ACR 18.0, Lightroom 9.0, Lr-iOS 10.4.0, Bridge 16.0 .
JohanElzenga
Community Expert
Community Expert
October 10, 2021

"NOW the Lightroom-CLASSIC dialog with three options  for “What to Edit” for a JPG or TIF changes the workflow!!!

[Edit a Copy with Lightroom Adjustments] opens the image in the Document window with Lightroom-CLASSIC Develop edits. NO ACR interface.

[Edit a Copy] and [Edit OriginalWILL open the ACR interface before the image is then ‘opened’ in the Document window."

 

This actually makes sense. The Lightroom develop module and ACR are identical in functionality. They only have a slightly different interface. So if you open an image with Lightroom adjustments, then it does not make sense to invoke the ACR dialog. Anything you would like to do in ACR, you simply could do (and probably already did) in Lightroom, before you send the file. Edit a copy and Edit Original send the file to Photoshop without Lightroom adjustments. In that case it does make sense to open the ACR dialog (if you have set that option in the ACR preferences).

 

-- Johan W. Elzenga
Community Expert
October 9, 2021

Lightroom C never opened raw files in camera raw when choosing open in Photoshop, it always just sent the instructions to Photoshop which would use the camera raw code to open it applying the Lightroom Classic settings but NEVER show the dialog. You can only get a dialog with the three choices upon choosing open in Photoshop when you try to open a non-raw file such as tiff, psd, jpeg, etc. in Photoshop from Lightroom Classic. For raw files, you will never get a dialog. It will just open straight in Photoshop interpreted into a full RGB bitmap file (defaults to 16 bit prophotoRGB) with a file name that still has the same name as the raw file but that will change into tif or psd upon saving in Photoshop.

elie_dinur
elie_dinurCorrect answer
Participating Frequently
October 9, 2021
  1. In the ACR Preferences (accessible from either PS or Bridge) there is a dialog box on the second page, “File Handling”, which can be set to “Automatically open all supported TIFFs” (or “JPGs”). In this event any Tiff or Jpg sent from LRC to PS will immediately and automatically be opened in ACR. In cases where LRC and PS are not parallel releases, LRC will send the original Tiff (if that is selected in the verification box) with the above result.
  2. If a Raw file is sent from LRC as a “Smart Object”, double-clicking on the layer thumbnail will cause it to open in ACR.
Inspiring
October 17, 2024

-Deleted-

 


My problem is as follow. When I had Photoshop 2024 and I transferred the image from Lightroom Classic to Photoshop 2024 camera raw opened automatically. In the new Photoshop 2025 camera raw does not open at all as before. I can edit the image with other Photoshop tools. My computer is MacBook Pro, processor is M1 Silicon, operating system is macOS Sequoia 15.0.1 (24A348). Photoshop is 2025 version 26.0.0. Lightroom Classic is 14.0.1 release Camera raw 17.0. When I open Creative Cloud, I can see all the installed applications on the right side, but there are no three dots on the right side of the Camera raw icon, as is the case with the other applications that appear there. How do I get Camera raw back into Photoshop and fix the problem?

Eero Happonen

JohanElzenga
Community Expert
Community Expert
October 9, 2021

This question pops up regularly. I have no idea why people seem to think that Lightroom would invoke Camera Raw. That has never been the case. The fact that they think that they should get the dialog with the three choices, which is also not true, may be because you do get (a different) dialog when you send a raw file to a plugin.

 

-- Johan W. Elzenga
John Lastar
Inspiring
October 9, 2021

Thank you.

Previously when I was in LR and clicked on edit in PS I would get the choices and if it was a raw file it would open in Camera Raw. Occasionally it will still open in camera raw but it no longer gives me the choices.

This is something that recently started happening. For the past years  I would get the choices and it would open a raw file in camera raw.

John Lastar

 

JohanElzenga
Community Expert
Community Expert
October 9, 2021

"Previously when I was in LR and clicked on edit in PS I would get the choices and if it was a raw file it would open in Camera Raw."

No, you would not. As others have said too, you do not remember that correctly. It never happened that way. You only get that dialog if you send a non-raw file to Photoshop, and sending a raw file does not invoke the Camera Raw dialog.

 

-- Johan W. Elzenga
Community Expert
October 9, 2021

It is completely normal for images sent from Lightroom Classic to Photoshop, to open straight into the PS editing environment. There is no need to see the ACR window: all of those same adjustments are available to apply in LrC before sending to PS.

 

If the file type of your image within LrC is Raw, you cannot open this original into PS and you also cannot open a copy of this original into PS - because PS cannot directly open a Raw file for editing. PS can only open a bitmap file, or else ask ACR to convert a bitmap file from Raw data.

 

It is true that sometimes in PS the document window title will initially report as if Raw, but this changes the moment the image is first saved to disk. Then the name of this 'actual' non-Raw PS document becomes evident: this will be either TIFF or PSD depending on choices set in LrC or else overridden in PS. And this bitmap file name is what then also self-imports back to LrC.

 

When in LrC you are dealing with a non-Raw (TIFF or PSD, or otherwise JPG) this is something which PS can directly open. But also something which you may have further edited in LrC, applying overlaid nondestructive adjustments.

 

So with non-Raw you are given choices: whether you want to begin a new copy which incorporates those edits; or to edit the content of this original directly while maintaining those edits still nondestructively happening in LrC; or to do this as a new copy onto which a copy of current LrC edits will be found to be nondestructively happening in LrC when you return there.

 

In both these last two options, these 'live' LrC edits will not be seen while in PS, because you are only working on the bitmap content which underlies those live edits. You will only ever see LrC edits inside PS, that have been at some point incorporated in the bitmap Background layer, of an entirely new image version.

 

It is IIRC possible in the 'external edit choices' menu, to check a box to not be asked again. An option in Preferences lets you reset that. But you will by design never see this menu anyway, if the image type concerned is a Raw format.