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31

P: Introducing the Project Indigo camera app

Adobe Employee ,
May 23, 2025 May 23, 2025

This post applies to the Project Indigo iOS camera app. 

 

Adobe Labs is excited to share an early look at Project Indigo, an iPhone camera app we've started to develop, to get feedback from the photography community. The app offers full manual controls, a more natural ("SLR-like") look, and high image quality in both JPEG and raw formats. It also introduces some new photographic experiences not available in other camera apps. For more information on the underlying technology, please refer to thiProject Indigo blog post.

 

Before you start with Project Indigo 

  • We recommend using Project Indigo on iPhone 15 Pro/Pro Max or newer devices.
    (Also supported are 12 Pro/Pro Max, 13 Pro/Pro Max, and all 14-series devices.)
  • You should have at least 1GB of storage space left for the app, the downloadable AI Models inside the app, and for captured photos. 

 

Recipes for success when using Project Indigo 

To get the maximum out of your images captured with the app, follow these guidelines: 

  • When reviewing the results, focus on Project Indigo's more natural look (in both SDR and HDR). If you haven’t done this before, try viewing the images on your laptop or desktop device, preferably on an HDR screen. 
  • Capture with both JPEG and raw DNGs with file saving enabled. Project Indigo produces computational photography DNG files, which have the same natural look as JPEG images, but much more latitude for editing after capture. 
  • Take control of the camera with the built-in Pro Controls, including controls that are exclusive to a computational camera: Frames to Merge and Merge Method. These may be intimidating for beginners, but with Project Indigo, you can try them for free, and nothing will break—you can always reset the settings to ‘Auto’ and let the camera take back control. 
  • Go to the Indigo Labs page and play with the latest innovations our team can offer. These are only available on mobile via Indigo! 
  • Be patient! Project Indigo is doing a lot of heavy lifting under the hood, and it will reward you with great photos. In return, it may ask you for a bit of time to set up captures when needed, and to wait a few seconds for the image processing to finish. 

 

Sending feedback 

Please try the app and share feedback in this community forum thread. If you report a problem you encountered, it would help to include details like which device you are running Project Indigo on, what kind of scene you were trying to capture, what you were trying to achieve with the camera, and as much information as possible about what you like or do not like about the resulting photo quality. Our team will continually monitor this thread to track issues and improve future experiences.  

 

To improve the performance and results of Project Indigo, it is important that examples of images that do not meet your expectations 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 the Project Indigo camera! 

 

Boris Ajdin: Product Manager, NextCam 
 
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Rikk Flohr: Adobe Photography Org
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iOS: iPhone
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replies 701 Replies 701
Explorer ,
Aug 14, 2025 Aug 14, 2025

@BorisTheBlade I took a 2x SR and 10x SR on a scene with foliages to see how it handles fine details and I noticed some weird things.  Either the merge didn't align right, or the fill AI didn't apply right bc there seems to be random radial blurring like faux bokeh look.  Almost like bad portrait mode bokeh.  I will attach raws for inspection, the SOOC jpeg, and crops of the issue place in lrm.

 

heres the 2x raw: https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/vhka3jbknfc2hop0bl04w/IMG_9513.dng?rlkey=sg4ht215fnxepzs3knqjehnva&st...


here's the 10x raw: https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/5adm0dma9uzumqc5jib26/IMG_9518.dng?rlkey=0fr27v0ipw8ns1ejdrtwm18v5&st...

 

Edit:  Forgot to add that the 1x, 2x processing took approximately 6-7s after shutter pressed.  Could this be improved upon?

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Adobe Employee ,
Aug 14, 2025 Aug 14, 2025
quote

@BorisTheBlade I took a 2x SR and 10x SR on a scene with foliages to see how it handles fine details and I noticed some weird things.  Either the merge didn't align right, or the fill AI didn't apply right bc there seems to be random radial blurring like faux bokeh look.  Almost like bad portrait mode bokeh.  I will attach raws for inspection, the SOOC jpeg, and crops of the issue place in lrm.


By @nhan_8084

Foliage is notoriously challenging, because it is very high frequency content which is rarely static. Together with camera shake, alignment errors are hard to avoid. This is a high priority image quality improvement for the team, so we'll be working on improving the results in the upcoming releases.

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Explorer ,
Aug 14, 2025 Aug 14, 2025

@BorisTheBlade That is awesome to hear that it is high priority 🙂  I went back and edited the post to mention about slow processing time, please re-look if you didn't happen to see it while you responded.

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New Here ,
Aug 14, 2025 Aug 14, 2025

Here I want to share the night scene that my friend took in Japan. The Indigo camera is really great.

However, the problem is that sometimes it takes a quiet long time to open, or even just freezes. This problem has only recently occurred on my iPhone 16 pro max.

 

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Adobe Employee ,
Aug 14, 2025 Aug 14, 2025
quote

Here I want to share the night scene that my friend took in Japan. The Indigo camera is really great.

However, the problem is that sometimes it takes a quiet long time to open, or even just freezes. This problem has only recently occurred on my iPhone 16 pro max.


By @realrev_

This is a very nice photo - thank you for sharing! Regarding the app seemingly slowing down, a couple of questions: did you by any chance update your OS on the device? We have noticed issues with some iOS 26 beta versions (e.g., beta 6), so that could be a part of it. Second question is whether you rebooted your device recently? It can help sometimes. If the issue persist please reach out again and we'll debug further.

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New Here ,
Aug 15, 2025 Aug 15, 2025

Hi Boris,

Thank you for getting back to me.

My device is currently on the latest iOS 18; I haven’t tried iOS 26 yet.

After rebooting my device, the issue has disappeared. 

It is worth mentioning that the Indigo camera can produce some degree of purple fringing when photographing subjects with clearly defined edges, which can be rather bothersome in photography. That said, as someone who has been using Leica digital cameras for over a decade as a hobby, I remain very satisfied with the Indigo.

 

Best wishes

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Explorer ,
Aug 16, 2025 Aug 16, 2025

@BorisTheBlade , FYI, I've seen this issue with just about every iOS 26 beta, including 6. On top of that, it's pretty useless to assign to the camera control button. It requires authentication (faceID) which makes it way less useful but the biggest issue is that most of the time it comes up with a completely black preview and no abilty to take a photo (click the button and it responds but doesn't produce an image). Hoping Adobe can find a fix for that. One month to go for iOS 26 to go out of beta 😉

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Community Beginner ,
Aug 14, 2025 Aug 14, 2025

There is a bug whereby if you Reset Edits in LR on an Indigo DNG, the Profile changes from 'Indigo' to 'Adobe Color'. I was hoping that this would be fixed in the latest LR 8.5. Is this a bug that needs a change to LR to fix or is it an issue with the DNG that needs an update of Indigo to fix?

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Adobe Employee ,
Aug 14, 2025 Aug 14, 2025
quote

There is a bug whereby if you Reset Edits in LR on an Indigo DNG, the Profile changes from 'Indigo' to 'Adobe Color'. I was hoping that this would be fixed in the latest LR 8.5. Is this a bug that needs a change to LR to fix or is it an issue with the DNG that needs an update of Indigo to fix?


By @leed24280355

This is a bit of a tricky question, as there are several versions of the DNG that could be used when the user wants to reset. Two most important ones are a version as intended by the camera (i.e., with the Indigo profile and with other rendering preferences set by the camera), and what the user's default rendering settings are. So when you click on 'Reset' the system cannot know which version you want to see. That is why there are several resetting options in ACR and Lightroom like "Reset to Default" and "Reset to Open". A recommendation when editing is to save versions, so you can always go back to a version that is meaningful to you. Others on the forum may have more helpful suggestions.

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Community Beginner ,
Aug 14, 2025 Aug 14, 2025

I am using the cloud version of LR on a Mac and the option is under the menu option Photo/Reset Edits, which is supposed to reset the photo to how it was on import.  If you do that on an Indigo DNG, the profile will change to 'Adobe Color'.

I have just realised that, at that point if you do Edit/Undo Reset Edits, it will switch the profile back to the Indigo one.

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Community Beginner ,
Aug 14, 2025 Aug 14, 2025

I have just discovered that if you import an Indigo DNG into LR Mobile, then go to LR (cloud) version on the Mac, open the image and then use the option 'View/Show Original' (also obtained by pressing and holding the \ character), even if no edits have been made at this point, the image will change to 'Adobe Color' profile. It's almost as if the DNG was actually imported with the Adobe Color profile and then changed to 'Indigo' automatically on import.

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Adobe Employee ,
Aug 14, 2025 Aug 14, 2025
quote

I have just discovered that if you import an Indigo DNG into LR Mobile, then go to LR (cloud) version on the Mac, open the image and then use the option 'View/Show Original' (also obtained by pressing and holding the \ character), even if no edits have been made at this point, the image will change to 'Adobe Color' profile. It's almost as if the DNG was actually imported with the Adobe Color profile and then changed to 'Indigo' automatically on import.


By @leed24280355

This goes back to the question of "what is a raw photo", which is in truth a philosophical question. To your specific point, "Original" may to some users mean "out of the camera", but to others it may mean "raw pixels + minimal processing". To be more precise, how Indigo DNGs are actually formed is as follows:

  1. Raw pixels are stored as pixel data (computed using Indigo's computational photography)
  2. Indigo profile is stored as metadata in form of tone and color Look Up Tables (LUTs), called PGTM and RGBT.
  3. Additional rendering preferences are stored as metadata, including exposure compensation, denoising and sharpening preferences, etc.

Here, number 1 is technically the "Original". You cannot of course just show those raw pixels without some minimal processing, so Lightroom does demosaicing and other post-processing steps as defined by your default camera settings. And 1+2+3 is what would be for "Reset to Import". Hope this helps a bit.

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Explorer ,
Aug 14, 2025 Aug 14, 2025

@BorisTheBlade thank you for explaining this!  This is what I needed to know.  So Indigo DNG is just the bullet point number 1 right?  Bullet point number 2 can be negated if chosing Adobe Standard right?  Bullet point number 3 should not be existing in the DNG bc that's considered baked processing like ProRaw, but not Indigo raw right?  I say that because from using third party raw app on Android like OpenCamera or Hedgecam 2, their raw is much much darker, with no luts and almost looks like true negatives with no colors and you would manually adjust saturation, and vibrancy etc...

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Adobe Employee ,
Aug 14, 2025 Aug 14, 2025
quote

So Indigo DNG is just the bullet point number 1 right?  Bullet point number 2 can be negated if chosing Adobe Standard right?  Bullet point number 3 should not be existing in the DNG bc that's considered baked processing like ProRaw, but not Indigo raw right? 


By @nhan_8084

This is partially correct:

  • Point 1 is the raw pixel data (after the computational processing pipeline of aligning and merging multiple frames is completed), which is stored in Indigo DNGs without any additiona adjustments.
  • Point 2 is the core of the Indigo "look", which is what is the main point behind the Indigo profile (tone and color LUTs). This is stored in the Indigo DNG as metadata and is easy to override by changing the profile to, e.g., Adobe Color.
  • Point 3 is additional guidance for the image viewer on how to render the raw pixels stored in the DNG, e.g., how much to sharpen, denoise, brighten/darken, etc. This is metadata which is ALSO stored in the Indigo DNG. But this can be overriden in Lightroom/Camera raw by moving the editing sliders. None of this metadata is baked into the actual pixels.

If you open an Indigo DNG in another raw viewer/editor (e.g., in Apple Photos) the image will look drastically different than it looks in Indigo or in Lightroom. That is because they ignore points 2 and 3 completely, and only use the raw pixel data + basic capture metadata (like exposure time, for example) they do their own rendering.

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Community Beginner ,
Aug 15, 2025 Aug 15, 2025

Thanks for the detailed explanations but I think perhaps my use case is rather simple. The Reset Edits or View Original options in any version of LR should show the image exactly as it appeared when first imported. This is the behaviour with any other file, RAW or otherwise.

For example, with an iPhone ProRaw file, LRM imports it and sets the Profile to Apple ProRaw. I can make edits and even change the Profile if I wish but Reset Edits always returns the image to the original state as when imported with the Profile set to Apple ProRaw. For this file type, Apple ProRaw appears as an option on the Profile drop-down, so if I have chosen some other profile (such as Adobe Standard), I can manually re-select Apple ProRaw to re-apply it if I wish.

With Indigo DNGs:

  • There is no option on the Profile drop-down to manually reselect the Indigo profile
  • If I reset the edits or view original, the original image as imported is *not* displayed because the profile reverts to Adobe Color.

This was all mentioned here early after the release of Indigo and I think the response was that you would check with the LR team to find a fix.

Thanks

Lee

 

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Adobe Employee ,
Aug 25, 2025 Aug 25, 2025
quote

With Indigo DNGs:

  • There is no option on the Profile drop-down to manually reselect the Indigo profile
  • If I reset the edits or view original, the original image as imported is *not* displayed because the profile reverts to Adobe Color.

This was all mentioned here early after the release of Indigo and I think the response was that you would check with the LR team to find a fix.

Thanks

Lee

 


By @leed24280355

I am following up with the Lr team on this, and we'll work on making the workflow better. Stay tuned.

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Explorer ,
Aug 14, 2025 Aug 14, 2025

If you are using Lightroom mobile on phone, I always use reset to import bc that should bring back everything as the intended dng you imported to start your edits in LRM.

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Community Beginner ,
Aug 14, 2025 Aug 14, 2025

If I use Indigo to take a DNG+JPG and then use LR Mobile to import the images, it will only import the DNGs. The JPGs are not imported to LR Mobile. Is there anyway to ensure that both versions are imported or can this be added as a feature to LR Mobile? I have the same issue when trying to import DNG+JPG pairs created by other apps (such as Halide).

My workaround is to open each DNG+JPG in Apple Photos and use the share option to Edit in Lightroom. That then brings the JPG into LR Mobile but this has to be done one image at a time, which is cumbersome.

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Adobe Employee ,
Aug 14, 2025 Aug 14, 2025
quote

If I use Indigo to take a DNG+JPG and then use LR Mobile to import the images, it will only import the DNGs. The JPGs are not imported to LR Mobile. Is there anyway to ensure that both versions are imported or can this be added as a feature to LR Mobile? I have the same issue when trying to import DNG+JPG pairs created by other apps (such as Halide).

My workaround is to open each DNG+JPG in Apple Photos and use the share option to Edit in Lightroom. That then brings the JPG into LR Mobile but this has to be done one image at a time, which is cumbersome.


By @leed24280355

Thank you for sharing this. Typically users want to import only one of the two, which is why Lightroom for mobile focuses on the DNG workflow. Having said that, one way to speed importing JPEGs is to multi-select several images in Apple Photos and then share with Lightroom. This way, all of them will be shared in one go, instead of going one by one.

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Community Beginner ,
Aug 15, 2025 Aug 15, 2025

Actually, if I take concurrent DNG+JPG images, I usually want to import both. I often do this so I can compare the DNG to the JPG to see how good (or not) the JPGs are. With a real camera you can often shoot RAW + JPG at the same time and LR or LRC enables you to import both side by side. So it would be really cool if LRM could add this as an option. 

 

I know of one app for iPhone that names the RAW and JPG slightly differently and in this case they appear as seperate files to LRM.

Lee

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Adobe Employee ,
Aug 25, 2025 Aug 25, 2025
quote

I know of one app for iPhone that names the RAW and JPG slightly differently and in this case they appear as seperate files to LRM.

Lee


By @leed24280355

We are working on adding support in Indigo for this. Hopefully that will make some user's workflows easier.

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New Here ,
Aug 15, 2025 Aug 15, 2025

Thank you to the team working on this app, it's so refreshing to see an app that leans even more on computational photography instead of less like so many other apps do. I love the app and am very excited to see what the next updates will bring! I have a few suggestions/feature requests and one question.

 

  1.  It's currently very hard to nail focus when adjusting it manually. It would be really helpful if the app had green/yellow/red focus peaking to help with that.
  2. When shooting in auto mode, it's hard to get both the appropriate focus and exposure right as similarly to the native Camera app, tapping on the screen will set both at the same time. I would love it if tap to focus and set exposure could be separated (possibly with a setting to control this behaviour), allowing me to tap to set both, and then drag out only the exposure or focus to another area on the screen. Check out ProCamera's interface for a great example of this. This would help me nail both settings 99% of the time and not even need to resort to manual mode.
  3. Eposure compensation should be easier to access. This is a frequently used setting, even in auto mode, to justify it being easily accessible without having to go into the manual settings menu. I would suggest moving the "Photo/Night" mode toggle to the side, and putting the "+/-" button front and center right above the shutter button. Again, look at ProCamera's different interface modes for great examples on how to solve this.
  4. If this app is going to rely so heavily on computational photography to the point of overheating most modern phones, a setting should be added to let us choose how much computation we actually want. You don't need to expose the exact parameters or optimizations used behvind the scenes, but just let me choose between 2 or 3 presets that customize how intensive the processing will be. Phrasing this in terms of what trade-offs could be expected could help communicate what each setting entails. Something like "Speed ----- Balanced ----- Quality" – where Quality would be the existing processing that tends to overheat phones, and the other two could be less intensive versions of that, with other priorities in mind.

 

Question

 

On that last note, like many people, my only "problem" with the app is how hot my iPhone 16 Pro gets when using it. This makes the whole experience poor, as it either gets uncomfortably hot to hold or the app will just start freezing under heavy load. While my suggestion above is one way I think this could be addressed in the future, I have found a workaround that works with the current version of the app, and wanted to check if this is a viable solution, in your opinion: I found that when I turn on "Low Power Mode" in the iOS Battery settings, the app will make my iPhone significantly less hot during use. This is expected, as Low Power Mode will, among other things, restrict processing and turn off the HDRness of the display in order to use less battery power. This also inevitably means the app will take a little longer to process the final shots, but I would say it's an overall better experience while using it. So my question is: does running the app with Low Power Mode turned on cause the app to compromise on the quality of the captured photos in any way? I think this is a viable workaround until the app can be optimized to not overheat most phones, or until chips get more powerful to run it without any issues, BUT I will only rely on it if that means there's no compromise on the quality of the output.

 

Thank you again for your attention to the feedback shared here, and for making this awesome app! 

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Adobe Employee ,
Aug 26, 2025 Aug 26, 2025
quote
By @pmattos92

Thank you for sharing detailed observations and suggestions. I'll do my best to comment or answer your questions:

  1. Getting manual focus right is tricky, I fully agree. The "focus peaking" feature you are mentioning is nee impossible to implement well. Basically, it is impossible to detect "peak sharpness" of a pixel or image region from a single image. You would need to analize the same scene but with multiple images, captured with focus shifting (i.e., a focus stack). Furthermore, this would heavily depend on the amount of noise in the image signal and zoom level. We tried implementing the feature and doing some quality tuning, but basically it ended up not being precise enough to be useful, which is why we didn't ship it and relied on the focus loupe in Pro controls.
  2. Improving focus and exposure in Auto mode is on our todo list. There are several aspects of it: separating the tap locations for focus and exposure, accounting for the digital zoom (this required changes in iOS which will be available in iOS 26; we will add them then), and adding the exposure compensation slider. All of these are on our roadmap.
  3. As mentioned in #2, we will add EC to Auto mode in one of the upcoming releases.
  4. This is an interesting suggestion. We are working on adding support for user-customizable post-processing parameters, but for computational photography this is for now accessible from the Pro Controls. Namely, in Night Mode, the last Pro Control on the right exposes the Frames To Merge slider: the fewer frames one uses, the faster processing will be, and vice versa. We can think about some more high-level app setting, but in truth, with Indigo we are trying to push the limits of computational photography and of iPhone hardware. We have quite a few additional optimizations to try which may limit or negate the need for customizing the amount of computational photography.

 

Regarding your question, low power mode should not compromize the quality of Indigo captures much, if at all. There may be some impact however, primarily with Zero Shutter Lag captures in Photo mode, where the rate of raw frames the app is able to get from the OS may go down. If there are fast moving scenes, there may be fewer frames to merge, resulting in noisier captures. Other than that, note that in low power mode your display will not show HDR properly, so images may not look good until you disable the low power mode.

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Adobe Employee ,
Aug 27, 2025 Aug 27, 2025
quote
quote
By @pmattos92

 

Regarding your question, low power mode should not compromize the quality of Indigo captures much, if at all. There may be some impact however, primarily with Zero Shutter Lag captures in Photo mode, where the rate of raw frames the app is able to get from the OS may go down. If there are fast moving scenes, there may be fewer frames to merge, resulting in noisier captures. Other than that, note that in low power mode your display will not show HDR properly, so images may not look good until you disable the low power mode.

Clarifying the low power mode a bit. Regarding ZSL capture, we suspect there may be impact on the frame rate of raw frames we may get from the system, but that is not confirmed. In reality, there may be no impact. And on the HDR side of things, the captured images will be processed just the same, it's just that the OS will disable the HDR display output (as it consumes a lot of power) so the images will temporarily look poorer. If you disable low power mode, then those same images will look just fine.

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Community Beginner ,
Aug 16, 2025 Aug 16, 2025

Is anyone using PI on an iPhone 16e? If so, how does it run and what zoom options are available?

Thanks

Lee

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