![]() ![]() If you’ve been a photographer for a long time then you may have thousands of digital photos scattered across multiple external hard drives. One of Lightroom Classic’s most valuable key features is its ability to help you manage your image files. Populate the layout of a photo book in the Book module and order a printed version from within Lightroom Classic (Image credit: George Cairns / Digital Camera World) Lightroom Classic: Key Features Fortunately Lightroom Classic continues to be supported by Adobe and it enjoys the benefits of the same AI-assisted editing tools that are found in the more streamlined Lightroom CC. If Adobe had let Lightroom Classic fade out as an unsupported legacy app then many professional photographers would have lost the ability to manage their comprehensive collection of images. The newer Lightroom CC has jettisoned many of the Lightroom Classic’s professional sharing options (such as the ability to create Contact sheets) to focus on faster photo-fixing and social media sharing on PC and smartphones. We’ll look at these modules in more detail later in this review. So why are there still two versions of Lightroom available and what are the key differences between them? Basically Lightroom Classic has several extra workspaces (or modules) that let you focus on tasks such as editing your photos (the Develop module), sharing them (the Book module), and even creating the layout for a website portfolio (the Web module). ![]()
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