How to Convert RAW to JPG in Lightroom Classic
Trying to figure out how to convert RAW files to JPEG in Lightroom Classic? Here’s how to do it.
Tips and tricks, how-to guides, and plugin reviews related to importing and exporting images in Lightroom.
Trying to figure out how to convert RAW files to JPEG in Lightroom Classic? Here’s how to do it.
One of the new features in Lightroom Classic is that you can use the embedded previews more effectively to speed up importing and culling.
There are several different ways to post to Instagram from a desktop or laptop. Here’s an option for posting to Instagram from Lightroom directly.
JPEGmini Pro offers a way to make filesizes impressively smaller with next to no quality loss. While it’s usually used as a standalone app, you can also hook it up with Lightroom Classic exports or Publish Services, making for a very useful workflow tool.
Here’s a method for exporting square photos from Lightroom without having to create virtual copies or use the crop tool.
Using Lightroom’s post-export options, if you’re using Mac it’s possible to optimize your images as part of the export process.
You can import very large images into Lightroom, but there are limits.
Publishing photos directly from Lightroom to Wordpress has some very useful benefits. Now there’s a plugin to make it happen.
Flickr is one of the most popular ways to share photos online. Here’s how to get your photos from Lightroom to Flickr.
The image uploader baked into Wordpress is pretty good. But if you’re using Lightroom there’s an even better option.
Importing images into Lightroom can sometimes seem to take forever. Here are some ways to streamline the process and save time.
The Lightroom export function allows you fine tune the quality of the resulting JPEGs in increments of single percentage points. But it turns out that the quality settings actually work in bands.
Having trouble finding the resize button in Lightroom Classic? There isn’t one. Here’s a simple guide to what you do instead.
If you need to send photos to a specific number of megapixels (for example for stock photography agencies), here’s how to do it in Lightroom.