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Is there a way to not import or "add" photos in lightroom cc (and onto laptop) and edit off of external hard drive? I don't like to actually add an entire photo session to my laptop because it can barely hold it.
No, that is not how Lightroom works. Lightroom Classic can add images to its catalog without copying or moving them however, so Lightroom Classic can work with images that are stored on an external drive.
Whilst you CAN combine using Lightroom Classic (LrC) with the Lightroom cloud, it is better to first decide how you are going to work and then stick to that plan. There are two main methods:
1. Using Lightroom Classic as the main repository of your images, while also using the cloud to access your images from another system (such as your laptop). In this scenario you would always import you images directly into LrC, so they are stored locally on your external drive. Once in LrC you then have t
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No, that is not how Lightroom works. Lightroom Classic can add images to its catalog without copying or moving them however, so Lightroom Classic can work with images that are stored on an external drive.
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The images are actually uploaded to a cloud server and stored there. They only temporarily are stored on the laptop hard drive while the upload is syncing. You can remove the photos from the laptop after the sync is complete. This might help with storage space. If you really want to edit images stored on an external drive you need Lightroom Classic, not Lightroom.
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Alternatively, simply change the location of the imported originals from the default (on the laptop) to the external drive. Then import as normal, but now the imports are stored on the external drive and not on the laptop and are still uploaded to the cloud. Initially the local copy on the external drive would be used for editing, and you could make that a more or less permanent thing by enabling the option to "Store a copy of all originals locally". Then provided the external drive remains connected, Lightroom will load the local copy of originals for editing, rather than download them from the cloud.
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I have a similar question. I think..lol. I have all my images on an external drive. Do I start with Lightroom CC then the originals ar ein cloud and external drive and then one backup with edits are in cloud?
But lets say I want to edit some of those or maybe all in lightroom classic becasue of the additional features it has .. how do I do that.. ( or should I actually then reverse the process but then that only puts syned copies in cloud not originals)
I dont want photos on my laptop . and I would like to work without my external drive always attached doe sthat make sense.. can it be done?
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Whilst you CAN combine using Lightroom Classic (LrC) with the Lightroom cloud, it is better to first decide how you are going to work and then stick to that plan. There are two main methods:
1. Using Lightroom Classic as the main repository of your images, while also using the cloud to access your images from another system (such as your laptop). In this scenario you would always import you images directly into LrC, so they are stored locally on your external drive. Once in LrC you then have the option to sync selected (or all) images to the cloud, and from the cloud they would then be available to access from any other connected app/device....such as the Lightroom desktop app on your laptop, or the Lightroom Mobile app on any smartphone or tablet, or even the Lightroom Web app which is available through any browser window. The advantages of this approach are:
And the downsides of this approach are:
2. The second method involves using the Cloud as the main repository for your originals. Specifically you would always only import all new images into one of the Lightroom ecosystem apps, so you would import your external drive images into the Lightroom desktop app. From there they would sync up to the cloud (full-resolution originals), where they would be handled by the Adobe servers. New captures on phone/tablet would also go to the same cloud servers. The advantages of this approach are:
The main disadvantage is of course the fact that some features available in LrC are not yet available in the cloud ecosystem, which puts off many of the traditional LrC user. Though of course it depends on whether you need those missing features or not.
Now, if you want you use this second cloud-based method as your primary tool, you CAN also integrate LrC as well (e.g. to get access to those features, such as printing that the Lightroom desktop app doesn't have). You could do that by starting a new LrC catalog, enable it to sync, and a copy of ALL the images in the cloud would download into that catalog, as will any subsequent additions to the cloud. In that state there are things that you can do in LrC or Lightroom which will sync to the other, but there are some things that do not sync (such as keywords and location data), so you would have to be very disciplined in your workflow to avoid the pitfalls that await you should you adopt this particular method of working. Using this "hybrid" system is most definitely NOT recommended by Adobe, and though I use it myself I also wouldn't recommend it to anyone who hasn't got the time and experience to thoroughly test it first, in order to identify the potential issues.
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