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Participant
January 15, 2019
Question

Saving full size photos WITH edits

  • January 15, 2019
  • 3 replies
  • 285 views

I don't know why there has been nothing to help me. I have been on the internet for 2 hours trying to figure out how to save my photos from Lightroom CC (which I only just discovered did NOT replace Lightroom Classic like I was lead to believe and everything has been stupidly, complicatedly different. It seems to only have 2 options. Save in JPEG or save the original "with" edits you just spent months working on... IT does however save your original files with an XMP file and from what I have been reading, is useless to me. So my main deal is that I just finished editing photos for a wedding and they want to be able to print big versions of their favorite pictures. They are friends as well so I would like to give them the edited versions to print but from what I have been told JPEG is only good for showing online and not for printing. So somebody please tell me that SOMETHING I read was wrong because I need to figure this out ASAP.

PS also I was told that I could convert them to DNG and that was the solution to my problem but I see no option to do so??

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3 replies

Jim Wilde
Community Expert
Community Expert
January 16, 2019

Simply use the Save To option, File Type>Jpeg, Size>Full Size. That will give you a full resolution jpeg file with quality setting of around 90....which should be perfectly acceptable for printing.

Theresa J
Community Expert
Community Expert
January 16, 2019

From Lightroom CC you could send the image to Photoshop and then save out whatever type and size file you need from there.

JP Hess
Inspiring
January 15, 2019

As you have discovered, Lightroom CC does not replace Lightroom Classic CC. Rather, it is an alternative Lightroom offering different features for a different type of user. A full-sized JPEG that has all of the editing included is certainly suitable for printing. In fact I think you will discover that most online labs prefer JPEG images. I don't know that any labs will process raw images, but then I am not familiar with many of the more professional labs.