Drag the slider to increase or decrease the strength of the Light tool.
Learn more about the Edit panel in Lightroom, its tools, and how to effectively use them.
Try the app
Follow along with any project to learn how to edit photos in Lightroom.
The Edit panel in Lightroom helps you enhance and perfect your photos. Select from various basic adjustments, such as Exposure and Contrast, to advanced features, like Color Grading and Lens Blur. Whether fine-tuning details or making dramatic changes, the Edit panel provides everything you need to bring your creative vision to life.
Open Lightroom on mobile app. Select the photo you want to edit and then select
. You can now edit your photo with any or all the tools mentioned here.One-tap edit settings
Auto
Select the Auto icon to apply the best edits for your image. The Auto feature in Lightroom for mobile uses Adobe Sensei to intelligently apply adjustments based on a photo’s light and color characteristics.
- Lightroom on mobile automatically applies Auto settings to your processed photo when you capture an HDR image using the in-app camera.
B&W
Select this option to convert your colored photos to black and white in just one tap.
Light
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Exposure
This slider controls the overall brightness of a photo. Moving it right lightens the image, while moving it left darkens it.
Contrast
This slider adjusts the light and dark areas. Increasing contrast using the slider creates a dramatic image, while decreasing it creates a softer look.
Highlights
This slider targets the brightest areas of your photo, allowing you to brighten or darken them selectively without affecting the midtones.
Shadows
This slider refines the darkest areas in a photo. Lightening shadows can recover details hidden in dark areas, while darkening them can add depth and richness.
Whites
This slider controls the pure white point of your image. Increasing it can make blown-out highlights appear whiter, while decreasing it can reduce overexposed areas.
Blacks
This slider controls the black points in a photo. Increasing it deepens blacks and adds richness, while decreasing it can lift shadow detail but risk losing detail.
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Select Curve to adjust individual points on the tone curve in the Red, Green, or Blue channels individually or all three channels simultaneously.
Note:The horizontal axis represents the original tone values (input values), with black on the left and progressively lighter values toward the right. The vertical axis represents the changed tone values (output values), with black on the bottom and lighter values progressing to white at the top. Use the tone curve to tweak the tone adjustments you make to a photo.
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Toggle Edit in HDR Mode. To learn more, see Edit HDR photos in Lightroom on mobile.
Color
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Manually adjust the following sliders to achieve the best editing results:
- Temperature: Determines how warm or cool the colors appear in your photo. Move the slider right if the colors are too blue, or move it left if they're too yellow.
- Tint: Determines how green or purple the colors appear in your photo. Move the slider right if the colors are too green, or move it left if they're too purple.
- Vibrance: Changes the saturation in a photo without causing unpleasant color casts. Move the slider right to make colors pop without oversaturation.
- Saturation: Controls the saturation of all colors equally. Move the slider right to boost all colors, or move it left to make your photo grayscale.
Note:Vibrance and Saturation sliders are only available when you use White Balance.
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Lightroom also allows you to adjust the color using the following options: B&W, Grading, Mix, and White Balance.
White Balance
Select the White Balance preset options using the drop-down menu to edit the image:
- As Shot: Uses the white balance setting from the camera.
- Auto: Automatically adjusts the white balance based on the analysis of the image.
- Custom: Lets you make adjustments as you want.
White Balance Selector: Use the selector icon to select an area in the photo that should be a neutral color to automatically correct the Temperature and Tint.
Color Mixer
The Color Mixer tool in Lightroom on mobile allows you to fine-tune the Hue, Saturation, and Luminance (HSL) of specific colors within a photo. The tool provides precise control over each color, enhancing specific tones without affecting the entire image. Follow the steps to use the tool:
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Select Edit > Color > Color Mixer icon.
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Select one of the available colors - Red, Orange, Yellow, Green, Aqua, Blue, Purple, and Magenta.
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Adjust the following sliders to further edit the selected color:
- Hue: Adjusts the hue of the selected color.
- Saturation: Adjusts the saturation of the selected color.
- Luminance: Adjusts the brightness of the selected color.
- Hue: Adjusts the hue of the selected color.
Color Grading
The Color Grading tool allows you to add color tints to different tonal ranges in a photo, including shadows, midtones, and highlights, to help create specific moods, enhance color harmony, or give your photos a stylized look.
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Select Edit > Color > Color Grading icon.
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Select a tonal range icon (Shadows, Midtones, Highlights)you want to adjust. Switch between these ranges by selecting the icons or swiping horizontally.
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Adjust the following:
Hue: Select and drag inside the color wheel to select a hue.
Saturation: Drag the small circle inside the wheel outward to increase saturation or inward to decrease it.
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For best results, adjust:
Blending: Controls a smooth transition between the Shadows, Midtones, and Highlights.
Balance: Controls overall emphasis between the Shadows and Highlights.
Blur
The Lens Blur tool in Lightroom adds aesthetic blur to any part of your photo. It allows you to easily apply optical Blur and Bokeh effects through an interactive, customizable experience that lets you define the blur amount and refine focus.
For a detailed walkthrough of the Lens Blur, view Lens Blur in Lightroom.
Effects
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Use the following sliders to adjust the:
- Texture: Adjusts the detail in your image. Move it to the left to smooth textures and achieve a softer look. Move it to the right to accentuate textures, adding definition and depth.
- Clarity: Increases local contrast to help add depth and a sense of "pop" to your image. However, be cautious when using Clarity, as overdoing it can create unwanted halos around the edges.
- Dehaze: Removes or adds haze to your photo. Move it to the right to clear up the haze, creating a crisp and clear look. Move it to the left to add the haze, which can help create a dreamy atmosphere.
- Texture: Adjusts the detail in your image. Move it to the left to smooth textures and achieve a softer look. Move it to the right to accentuate textures, adding definition and depth.
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Drag the Amount sliders to adjust the Vignette and Grain.
Vignette: Darkens or lightens the edges of your photo, drawing the viewer's eye toward the center. You can choose a highlight or shadow vignette depending on the desired effect.
Grain: Adds a realistic film grain effect to your photos, mimicking the look of analog photography. This can be particularly useful for black-and-white images or adding a vintage feel.
Detail
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Drag the Sharpening slider right to enhance details with the help of advanced controls.
- Radius: Adjusts the size of sharpened details. Use lower values for fine details and higher values for larger ones. Too high can look unnatural.
- Detail: Controls how much high-frequency information is sharpened. Lower values sharpen only edges, higher values enhance textures.
- Masking: Determines where sharpening is applied. At 0, sharpening affects the entire image; at 100, it’s limited to solid edges.
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Drag the slider to adjust the detail of your image.
- Noise Reduction: Reduces luminance noise.
- Detail: Balances noise reduction and detail preservation.
- Contrast: Adjusts contrast, with higher values keeping contrast but risking noise, and lower values smoothing the image.
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Drag the slider to adjust the detail of your image.
- Color Noise Reduction: Reduces color noise and adjusts the detail and smoothness.
- Detail: Controls the color noise threshold. Higher values protect thin, detailed color edges but may result in color speckling. Lower values remove color speckles but may result in color bleeding.
- Smoothness: Higher values apply a softened effect to the speckled color tones.
- Color Noise Reduction: Reduces color noise and adjusts the detail and smoothness.
Noise includes Luminance (graininess) and Chroma (colored artifacts), common in photos taken at high ISO speeds.
Optics
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Select Remove Chromatic Aberration to apply it to an image.
Note:Chromatic Aberration appears as a color fringe along the edges of objects. It's caused by the failure of the lens to focus different colors to the same spot, aberrations in sensor microlenses, and flare.
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Toggle Enable Lens Corrections to apply it to an image. Lens corrections, such as Distortion Correction and Lens Vignetting, are based on the specific lens used to capture the photo. The software does this by applying lens profiles.
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Change the lens profile for automatic correction. Then, select Manually Select a Profile and change your lens based on Make, Model, and Profile.
Profiles
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Select the Favorites dropdown in the Profile panel to view profiles under different categories, such as Favorites, Basic, Artistic, B&W, Modern, or Vintage, to view and select the desired profile for your photo.
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Adjust the profile intensity using the additional Amount slider provided when you apply any of the Basic, Artistic, B&W, Modern, or Vintage profiles.
Long press on the photo to see a Before view.
Manage Profiles
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Select the Profiles menu and select Manage Profiles.
icon in the
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Toggle on the profile groups that you want to show in the Profiles menu in the Manage Profiles section and disable the ones you want hidden.
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Select
.Tip:Use the Manage Profiles option to show the legacy Lightroom profile groups, which are hidden by default.
Import profiles from Google Drive and local storage
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Select the Profiles menu and select Import Profiles.
icon in the
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Select the profiles you want to import from Google Drive or any folder on your mobile. You can select individual dcp or xmp files. You can also select zip files that contain multiple dcp and xmp files.
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The imported profiles appear in the Profiles pop-up menu.
Use the Undo , Redo , Versions , and, Reset icons to return to the previous or original adjustments.
Have a question or an idea?
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