It will show all connected hard drives, memory cards and cameras. This shows you the various places from which you can import photos.
The layout of this dialogue box is very logical-you just adjust the settings in the windows from left to right and then hit the Import button. The areas in the red boxes are referred to in the descriptions below. Switch the camera on and click the Import button to bring up the import dialogue box: The Import dialogue box.
To import pictures from your camera, connect it to your computer using a USB cable (there’s no need to use a card reader or other special software). If this pane is not visible, just tap the TAB key and it should appear as follows: On the left-hand side of the screen, you should see a pane containing several other panels and, at the bottom of this, you should see the ‘Import’ button. It should look like this: The module selector: hit the ‘G’ key to quickly access this. If you can’t see it, click the little arrow at the top centre. This is done from the Library Module.Ĭheck that the Library Module has been selected in the top module selection strip. You cannot edit any photos in Lightroom until you’ve first imported them. It’s rather like filling in an old style index card for a new book in a library. The location of your photos and camera-generated EXIF data (shutter speed, aperture, time and date, etc.) are all entered into Lightroom’s catalogue. In essence, importing your photos boils down to telling Lightroom where they are in your storage. Selecting a region changes the language and/or content on may have heard people talking about ‘importing photos into Lightroom’ as if they’re somehow adding the images themselves to Lightroom. Super Resolution is especially useful to increase the resolution of a cropped image.
This feature supports the same file types as Raw Details, plus additional file types such as JPEG and TIFF. This means that the enhanced image will have 2x the width and 2x the height of the original image, or 4x the total pixel count. Super Resolution, introduced in Lightroom desktop 4.3, helps create an enhanced image with similar results as Raw Details but with 2x the linear resolution. The supported file types are raw mosaic files from cameras with Bayer sensors (Canon, Nikon, Sony, and others) and Fujifilm X-Trans sensors. This feature is especially useful for large displays and prints, where fine details are visible. The resolution of the enhanced image stays the same as the original image. Raw Details, previously called Enhance Details produces crisp detail and more accurate renditions of edges, improves color rendering, and also reduces artifacts. You can now easily enhance image quality using Raw Details and Super Resolution.
How to Add Presets/Sync Presets with mobile.