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Adobe Photoshop Lightroom

Adobe Photoshop Lightroom
Adobe Photoshop Lightroom CC icon.svg
Developer(s) Adobe Systems
Stable release
6.8 / December 8, 2016; 2 months ago (2016-12-08)
Written in C++, Lua
Operating system Windows, macOS
Type Image organizer, digital image processing
License Trialware
Website www.adobe.com/products/photoshop-lightroom.html

Adobe Photoshop Lightroom (Lr or LR) is a photo processor and image organizer developed by Adobe Systems for Windows and macOS. It allows viewing, organizing and retouching large numbers of digital images. Lightroom's edits are non-destructive. Despite sharing its name with Adobe Photoshop, it cannot perform many Photoshop functions such as doctoring (adding, removing or altering the appearance of individual image items), rendering text or 3D objects on images, or modifying individual video frames.

Lightroom is not a file manager like Adobe Bridge. It cannot operate on files unless they are imported into its database first, and only in recognized image formats.

Lightroom is written in the programming languages C++ and Lua.

Lightroom is focused on the following workflow steps:

Tethered Capture Support for many popular Nikon and Canon DSLRs.

In 1999, veteran Photoshop developer Mark Hamburg began a new project, code-named Shadowland (meant as a reference to the 1988 KD Lang music album of same name). Hamburg contacted Andrei Herasimchuk, former interface designer for the Adobe Creative Suite, to get the project off the ground. The new project was a deliberate departure from many of Adobe's established conventions. 40% of Photoshop Lightroom is written using the scripting language Lua. In 2002 Hamburg finally left the Photoshop project and in fall of the same year he passed around a first experimental software sample that bear the name PixelToy to his former team mate Jeff Schewe for review, and later in middle 2003 presented a first version of Shadowland in a very early UI version to him. After a few years of research by Hamburg, Herasimchuk, Sandy Alves, the former interface designer on the Photoshop team, and Grace Kim, a product researcher at Adobe, the Shadowland project got momentum around 2004. However, Herasimchuk chose to leave Adobe Systems at that time to start a Silicon Valley design company. Hamburg then chose Phil Clevenger, a former associate of Kai Krause's, to create a new look for the application.


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