Adobe brings Lightroom to the Mac App Store

Posted:
in Mac Software edited November 2019
Adobe has brought Lightroom, its flagship photo editing and management app, to the Mac App Store a year after Apple announced its big revamp coinciding with the release of macOS Mojave. The move is Adobe's first major app to make the leap.




Adobe's Lightroom joins Microsoft's Office 365, Panic's Transmit, and Bare Bones Software's BBEdit as major Mac apps now available from the largest catalog of Mac apps in the world.

While major developers were quick to embrace the iOS App Store, many Mac developers hesitated to put their work on the Mac App Store because they already had other options for selling their work. Additionally, Apple imposed some restrictions for apps sold on its official App Store that were similar to iOS, but entirely new to the more openly permissive software model that has long existed for Macs.

Apple has made some adjustments to accommodate Mac developers' needs, and last year also gave its Mac App Store the same overhaul that it brought to iOS 11 two years ago. The revamped App Store in macOS Mojave, just like iOS 11's a year earlier, focuses on editorially curated content, with regular "App of the Day" and "Game of the Day" sections as well as lists, how-tos, developer interviews and feature pieces highlighting third-party developer's work.

Apple opens the aperture for Lightroom

Another enticement for Adobe bringing Lightroom to the Mac App Store: Apple's own Aperture is now going away, with last year's Mojave being the last version of macOS capable of running the aging app. Apple first launched Aperture back in 2005 as a professional version of iPhoto.

Aperture was initially viewed as Apple taking on Photoshop, but the new title was really aimed at managing photographic workflows rather than comprehensive photo editing. Adobe was quick to react, however, launching its own beta of Lightroom just weeks after its launch.

After competing for several years, Apple essentially put Aperture into maintenance mode in 2014 and began recommending that users move to Adobe's Lightroom.

Apple has since taken many of the unique features it created for Aperture and folded them into iPhoto, and now the renamed Photos, upgrading the free, bundled photos app into an advanced photo management tool for consumers that uses advanced Machine Learning to make photos searchable, along with powerful features that present summaries of your photo library and help you discover events and memories.

In April, Apple noted that Mojave would be the last version of macOS capable of running its aging, 32-bit Aperture software. The title hasn't been listed on the Mac App Store since 2015.

Lightroom for pros in the Mac App Store


Emphasizing its professional audience, Adobe commonly refers to the title as "Photoshop Lightroom." The app is a free download from the Mac App Store and comes with a free one-week trial. There are In-App purchase options to subscribe monthly at $9.99 or annually for $118.99. Adobe refers to this as "a cloud-based service for people who love photography" which "gives you everything you need to edit, organize, store, and share your photos across desktop, mobile, and web."

A subscription to Photoshop Lightroom includes 1TB of cloud storage to "access your entire library of full-resolution photos anytime you want, anywhere you are, from any device," with powerful photo editing features that enable you to adjust your full-resolution shots and keep both your originals and edits backed up to the cloud.

Adobe's App Store listing notes that "with easy-to-use photo editing tools like sliders and filters, Photoshop Lightroom makes it simple to create photos that look just the way you want. And you can edit your full-resolution photos anywhere -- on mobile devices, the web, or your desktop. Edits on one device are automatically applied everywhere else."

Featuring "smarter organization," the company notes that Lightroom incorporates its Adobe Sensei machine learning "to recognize the people and other content in your photos and then applies searchable keywords automatically. Looking for shots of your cousin or favorite trips to the water? Auto-tagging makes searching a snap so you can create albums based on any person or theme you want."

Another feature is easy sharing: "post photos directly to social sites, showcase them on your website by sending them directly to Adobe Portfolio, and create stunning graphics, web pages, and video stories in minutes with Adobe Spark."

Featured by Apple

Apple is promoting Lightroom in two Mac App Store feature articles: "Master the Basics of Lightroom: 4 features every newbie should know" and "Move Up to Adobe Lightroom: edit and organize like a pro, no matter your skill set."

The first feature states, "Adobe Lightroom may be a go-to tool for creative professionals, but this powerful photo editor and manager is approachable enough for beginners. Here are four ways the app helps fledgling photographers up their game."

The first outlines Lightroom's machine learning to identify people, objects, and scenes. The second outlines powerful editing features such as the Auto tool (below), which is designed to "figure out the ideal adjustments to make to your image," then "show you exactly what those adjustments are. Take a look at its suggested settings for exposure, contrast, and more, and experiment with each slider to see how it affects the image."


Lightroom's Auto tool


Next, Apple suggests you "experiment with the more advanced options. In the Light panel, for example, click the button that looks like an S to open the Tone Curve. It'll let you edit Shadows, Highlights, and everything in between with more precision than the simple sliders offer.

"Or enable the Color Mixer by heading to the Color panel and clicking the rainbow circle. This tool lets you adjust the hue, saturation, and luminance of specific colors in your photo.

"Both work similarly: Click a target icon and select the area you want to modify, then experiment. (Skin is a great place to start.) Tone Curve adjusts only portions of the image that are similarly lit; Color Mixer adjusts only portions that are similarly colored."


Lightroom's Tone Curve


Under the heading "make the most of your edits," the App Store feature notes that "once you've tweaked a photo to perfection, there's no need to start from scratch when you move on to the next one. Just select the adjustment panels you want to reuse, copy them, switch to a new image, and paste. It's a fast way to edit several photos from a similarly lit portrait sitting or event.

"To easily apply those settings to a bunch of images, create a preset. (Click Presets > Options (...) > Create Preset.) Once you've saved a preset, you can apply it to other photos at any time."

Mac users on Mojave or the upcoming Catalina Public Beta can peruse the Mac App Store and review the listings for Adobe and Apple's feature articles, which are exclusively presented in the Mac App Store itself, and not available on the web.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 13
    emig647emig647 Posts: 2,455member
    First, this is great! Glad Adobe is finally seeing the benefit.

    Unfortunately, I am very unclear what you get for $119 annually besides cloud storage and syncing / sharing between devices?
    macplusplus
  • Reply 2 of 13
    I have to admit that I'd be more inclined to subscribe to Adobe's software if they offered an annual discount - $9.99/mo or $99/yr.  It somehow grates on me to see an annual price that's "monthly price x 12".
  • Reply 3 of 13
    therfmantherfman Posts: 52member
    This is just the Cloud version of Lightroom, with a limited set of capabilities.  Lightroom Classic is the real alternative to Aperture, and is not available here.  If you're going to pay monthly, better off going directly through Adobe and getting Classic as well.
    polymniaraulcristian
  • Reply 4 of 13
    djames4242djames4242 Posts: 651member
    therfman said:
    This is just the Cloud version of Lightroom, with a limited set of capabilities.  Lightroom Classic is the real alternative to Aperture, and is not available here.  If you're going to pay monthly, better off going directly through Adobe and getting Classic as well.
    I wish I could find an actual alternative to Aperture. Lightroom long ago leapfrogged Aperture in terms of editing tools, but it still has yet to catch up with Aperture in terms of workflow. With stacks (including automatically stacking images based on timestamp) and the stack view, I could literally take a 500 image shoot and ween it down to a couple dozen images in about 5-10 minutes. From what I have seen of Lightroom, it still doesn't have anything close to this.

    I may have to create a virtual machine with an older version of MacOS just so I can continue using Aperture, unless anyone has recommendations for a great image workflow tool.
  • Reply 5 of 13
    therfman said:
    This is just the Cloud version of Lightroom, with a limited set of capabilities.  Lightroom Classic is the real alternative to Aperture, and is not available here.  If you're going to pay monthly, better off going directly through Adobe and getting Classic as well.
    I wish I could find an actual alternative to Aperture. Lightroom long ago leapfrogged Aperture in terms of editing tools, but it still has yet to catch up with Aperture in terms of workflow. With stacks (including automatically stacking images based on timestamp) and the stack view, I could literally take a 500 image shoot and ween it down to a couple dozen images in about 5-10 minutes. From what I have seen of Lightroom, it still doesn't have anything close to this.

    I may have to create a virtual machine with an older version of MacOS just so I can continue using Aperture, unless anyone has recommendations for a great image workflow tool.
    Thanks Adobe, but no, you lost me many years ago! Still sorry that Apple abandoned Aperture...but, I have found a Lightroom replacement that I don't have to rent: ON1 Photo RAW 2019. Anyone looking for a replacement should take a look at it. It's a terrible name, and they don't promote it well, but the program has a lot of great features.
  • Reply 6 of 13
    dysamoriadysamoria Posts: 3,430member
    Still subscription only? PISS OFF. 
  • Reply 7 of 13
    The $9.99 per month gets you both the LR Cloud based Lightroom CC AND Lightroom Classic for the desktop as well as Photoshop for the desktop.  That’s 3 Apps for that price including iOS LR Cloud as well for your iPhone and iPad. 

    As a pro (then retired), with highest-end camera bodies and lenses, I need this software; BUT my iPhone does so well on good light, I appreciate LR Cloud on my iPhone and iPad AND the best camera is the one with you. Plus iPhone is lightweight.  
    -
    LR CC Cloud has some features that are missing, that are in the desktop Classic version—LR Classic includes stacking mentioned in previous comment (since early days of LR) and importantly, being able to rename your photos.
    -
    There are more features exclusive to LR Classic that I won’t go into here, and LR Classic isn’t missing any of LR Cloud features that I’m aware of. The LR Cloud version has gotten very powerful with updates in last two years.
    -
    I find renaming photos as a critical feature in LR Classic.  A bunch of camera created numbers as filenames have little use for me.
    -
    I especially like batch renaming in LR Classic since it’s inception — I can put a three letter abbreviation of client and/or event plus my initials plus starting file name with date in yyyymmdd format so I can sort exported photos by date (some events are multi-day events) within event folders that have same date strategy in naming. 
    -
    So:  Three programs for your Mac for $9.99 per month PLUS you get iOS version free in that case. 
    I’m kind of a wizard in both LR Classic, LR Cloud and Photoshop if you have questions.  
    -
    This is the only Adobe subscription I care for, any others are too expensive as I’m not making money as s Pro anymore—I’m retired and do photo work for my non-profit and other non-profits for free. 
    -
    I wish they had non- profit or retiree pricing to make affordable for us who are doing good work for good causes. Especially in other apps in their suite as I am a graphic designer as well. 
  • Reply 8 of 13
    fastasleepfastasleep Posts: 6,417member
    The $9.99 per month gets you both the LR Cloud based Lightroom CC AND Lightroom Classic for the desktop as well as Photoshop for the desktop.  That’s 3 Apps for that price including iOS LR Cloud as well for your iPhone and iPad. 
    I wonder which plan(s) are available through the App Store version. Through Adobe directly, they confusingly offer two $9.99 plans. I have no idea why you'd pick the first over the second:


  • Reply 9 of 13
    polymniapolymnia Posts: 1,080member
    The $9.99 per month gets you both the LR Cloud based Lightroom CC AND Lightroom Classic for the desktop as well as Photoshop for the desktop.  That’s 3 Apps for that price including iOS LR Cloud as well for your iPhone and iPad. 
    I wonder which plan(s) are available through the App Store version. Through Adobe directly, they confusingly offer two $9.99 plans. I have no idea why you'd pick the first over the second:


    It’s pretty obvious why: the first option includes 1TB of cloud storage. I wouldn’t pick it either, but someone else might. I imagine an SLR shooter who has taken to shooting RAW format and uses LR to process them and store the (very sizable) files but lacks Photoshop chops & is not terribly cloud savvy might get value from the first option. 
  • Reply 10 of 13
    @djames4242 have you tried Darktable? https://www.darktable.org/ I'm not an expert but thought I would mention incase you hadn't come across it
  • Reply 11 of 13
    I think Skylum's (skylum.com)  Luminar 3 is the best alternative to Lightroom. In fact, I personally believe it is superior to Lightroom! I use it in combination with Pixelmator Pro. No subscription. The App Store version of Lightroom is the limited version. If you are serious into photography, subscribe to Lightroom Classic from Adobe's website. But why when you've got Luminar 3?
  • Reply 12 of 13
    chasmchasm Posts: 3,294member
    emig647 said:
    First, this is great! Glad Adobe is finally seeing the benefit.

    Unfortunately, I am very unclear what you get for $119 annually besides cloud storage and syncing / sharing between devices?
    Updates and support, and the apps themselves of course.
  • Reply 13 of 13
    djames4242djames4242 Posts: 651member
    @djames4242 have you tried Darktable? https://www.darktable.org/ I'm not an expert but thought I would mention incase you hadn't come across it
    Thank you - I've actually just recently downloaded it and am trying to figure out its interface. I found a nice AppleScript to generate some of Aperture's metadata for Darktable which worked well...
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