Adobe Lightroom adds video support

Adobe today announced that it is adding video support to Lightroom, its image organization and manipulation tool for photographers. Users will be able to use the same tools they currently use for changing the look and feel of images to manipulate videos, too. And while Lightroom won’t replace tools like Adobe Premiere, Rush or their competitors like DaVinci Resolve, it’ll also feature the ability to trim videos.

Adobe is also adding a number of new features that will make working with presets in Lightroom easier (as well as new premium presets) and it’s adding a new AI-powered red-eye removal tool that can automatically detect red eyes and fix them with a single click. Also new — and I know a lot of photographers have long been waiting for this — is a new Compare View that, you guessed it, lets you compare images side by side.

Image Credits: Adobe

The highlight of the release, though, is video support, especially because nobody today really thinks of Lightroom as a video tool. Adobe, however, argues that for a lot of the basic workflows — add a bit of contrast, make an image warmer, etc. — the tools are essentially the same. And with this, it’ll also be easier for photographers and videographers to match the look of their images and photos. Lightroom’s image presets will now also work for videos, too.

“There are a couple of great things about being able to use the same edit tools that you already use on your photos on your videos as well — and one of them is that you already know how to do it,” Adobe’s Benjamin Warde said in a press briefing ahead of today’s announcement. “If you can edit photos in Lightroom, now you can edit videos in Lightroom, but the other great thing is that it allows you to achieve a consistent aesthetic across both photos and videos.”

That feels like a bit of a niche use case, to be honest. There’s no timeline, so you can’t actually create a video that mixes videos and images in Lightroom, so you’ll end up in a fully featured video editing tool anyway. For now, there’s also no integration with Adobe’s video products. My guess is that if you quickly want to share a single clip to social media, though, this isn’t the worst way to go.

The new video functionality is now available in Lightroom for Mac, Windows, iOS and Android.

Image Credits: Adobe

With this update, the Lightroom team is also putting a renewed emphasis on presets. Not everybody wants to start editing every photo from scratch, after all. The marquee feature here is adaptive presets, available now in Adobe Camera Raw, Lightroom Classic and Lightroom for Mac and Windows. Adobe describes these as “an entirely new class of presets,” though some of them might feel familiar if you’ve previously used tools like Skylum’s Luminar AI. There’s a preset for making skies more dramatic and one for making the subject of your photo pop. For now, that’s it, but Adobe will surely add more of these in the near future.

Also new are five new premium preset packs from the likes of Ayesha Kazim, Jessy J. and Megan Sumpton, as well as intensity sliders for existing presets.

Image Credits: Adobe

Another nifty new feature is automatic red-eye removal. The name really says it all. It uses AI to find red eyes in your images and automatically remove all of them. Until now, you had to point Lightroom’s red-eye removal tool to every eye individually, so this could save photographers quite a bit of busywork. Like so many of Adobe’s AI features, this new tool won’t be coming to Lightroom Classic, but will only be available in Lightroom for Mac and Windows and Adobe Camera Raw.

Image Credits: Adobe

Finally, Lightroom will now also make it easier to compare images by seeing them side-by-side so you can pick the best version of those 50 images you shot of influencers taking pictures of the villages of Cinque Terre.