Adobe Lightroom Just Launched an Additional New Video Support Feature

Today, Adobe made the announcement that it is introducing support features for video to Lightroom. Adobe Lightroom has always been very well-known and has become a go-to app for many when it comes to editing photos. However, that is where it draws the line. Back then, it could only be used to edit photos.

Lightroom is an image organizing and processing application designed for photographers. It is one of the numerous apps designed by Adobe that are widely used by both professional and amateur photographers to make edits to their photographs.

This tool, commonly used by users at their disposal for modifying the overall appearance of photographs, will now be available to edit videos as well.

Adobe Lightroom's Video Support

Adobe Lightroom users can now make their films look just as good as their photographs by using the exact same editing capabilities that they have been using up until now. As reported by TechCrunch, users can now obtain a consistent aesthetic across both their photos and videos by copying and pasting edit settings between their photos and videos in Lightroom.

With this recent roll-out, presets can also be utilized when editing videos on the platform, such as Lightroom's AI-powered Recommended Presets and Premium Presets, both of which support the use of videos. Also, another video support feature that has been added is the ability to "crop" users' videos, cutting portions of the videos they do not like.

Adobe Lightroom's New Features

Adobe, aside from adding the new video support, also added multiple new features to their product. Lightroom will make editing easier for some users by adding new presets, including new premium presets.

The new preset features for Lightroom include a Preset Amount slider that allows users to change the strength of a preset that they apply to a photo or video. This new feature is one of several new preset features that users will find in the updated version of Lightroom.

In addition, there are also Adaptive Presets, which provide users with the ability to apply a preset that selectively and mechanically focuses on a particular part of the photo. Adobe claims that the first two sets of adaptive presets were created to make skies appear more dramatic and to make the subjects of photographs really stand out from the background.

According to digitaltrends, it also added a new feature, the new red-eye removal tool, that is powered by artificial intelligence and can automatically detect red eyes and correct them with a single click.

In addition to that, there is also a new feature in Lightroom called Compare View. This feature will enable users to compare photographs side by side.

Despite the fact that the majority of Lightroom's features are still geared toward still photography, the newly added video tool will be of great assistance to photographers who are already familiar with Lightroom's color grading capabilities and who occasionally work with short video clips.

It will also be handy for those situations in which only a few fundamental alterations need to be made, thereby removing the requirement to fire up specialized video editing software.

Lastly, users will have access to five new packs of Premium Presets for Lightroom Classic, Lightroom for Mac/Windows, iOS, Android, and the web. These packs were produced by professional photographers who were chosen by Adobe.

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