Adobe’s update to the Android version of Photoshop Lightroom for Mobile brings several features from the iOS app. Lightroom on Android 2.0 adds an in-app camera that can shoot in RAW and through preset filters; Dehaze tool; Split Toning for creating stylized images; Target Adjustment tool for adjusting specific areas of an image; Point mode in the Curve tool for adjusting tonality and contrast; and video story creation via the Adobe Premiere Clip app. The updated app was announced at the 2016 Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. Without needing to exit the app, users can now shoot photos directly, as-in the iOS version. With the live-view image, you can adjust camera settings (flash, white balance, exposure compensation, grid, and shutter delay) and see the changes in real-time. There are also five preset filters, and any edits made afterward are non-destructive, so you can always revert to the original. And while Lightroom Mobile doesn’t require an Adobe Creative Cloud account, users with a subscription can have the photos automatically synced to the cloud, and access them later on another device. Related: Adobe’s Portfolio lets you build websites fast, no coding required The advantage Lightroom on Android has over the iOS version is its ability to shoot (using compatible devices) and edit RAW files (in Adobe’s DNG format). When editing uncompressed RAW, you have greater control when editing images than you would with JPEGs, and can preserve image quality. (The iOS version can’t shoot RAW, although it can edit RAW files that are specially formatted for the iPhone or iPad, and are smaller in size.) The Split Tonight feature creates a distinctive look to photos by applying a color tone to the highlights or shadows, or replicates the look of a split-toned black and white photo, according to Adobe. The Tone Curve tool with Point Curve Mode lets you adjust individual red, green, and blue color channels — similar to the desktop versions of Photoshop and Lightroom. Dehaze is a fairly new Photoshop tool that’s now made it to Lightroom for Android. As the name suggests, it helps you remove haze or fog in a photo and bring out the color and contrast. The Targeted Adjustment Tool lets you tune colors of a specific area, even black and white images. For example, you can point the tool on the color of an object and adjust it to create more impact and bring attention to it. Photos can be shared directly to social networks like Facebook, Twitter, and Flickr. A new feature is the creation of photo-based video clips, synced to music, by sending them to the Adobe Premiere Clip app. With the new features, Adobe brings parity to Lightroom for Android with the iOS version (at least until the next version for iOS is released). However, Adobe says the app is really designed for Android phones, as Android tablets don’t offer the same capture experience. You could argue that the Lightroom 2.0 for Android is stronger than Lightroom for iOS since it supports RAW capture and edit. While iOS users tend to be the first to get new features, Adobe’s continuation of its practice of releasing Android updates, even if it’s a few months down the line, suggests they see growth in the Android user base. As for the app itself, whether it’s iOS or Android, it’s getting stronger, which shows photographers’ workflows are moving toward mobile devices. In his early preview of Lightroom for Android 2.0, photographer Colby Brown says, “I feel it is only a matter of time before the mobile version of LR is close to as powerful as its desktop counterpart.” Also watch: Adobe pulls Creative Cloud update after files go AWOL on Macs Please enable Javascript to watch this video



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