To get started, open the Settings app on your iPhone (or iPad). This setting can be changed in the Settings app. You can force photos to remain on your iPhone even with iCloud synchronization enabled, so that you will be able to import all photos into Lightroom Classic. For example, when you go to import into Lightroom Classic directly from your iPhone you will only see a fraction of the photos that are on your iPhone in the Import dialog. What this means is that your photos won’t necessarily be available locally on your iPhone, which in turn means the photos won’t be available to import into Lightroom Classic. Only when you attempt to work with a photo directly, such as by editing a photo, will the full-resolution version be downloaded. What that means is that in order to maintain more available storage on your iPhone the full-resolution copies of your photos will be stored in the cloud on Apple’s servers. More Detail: If you have enabled photo synchronization to iCloud, by default iPhone photo storage will be “optimized”. Tim’s Quick Answer: If your photos are being synchronized to iCloud, you’ll need to ensure that all photos are on your iPhone before you attempt to import to Lightroom Classic, or otherwise ensure that all photos are actually available for import. Is there a way to import selected images from my iPhone into Lightroom? I have many thousands of images taken with the iPhone, which I guess are all stored in the Cloud. Looking at directions online, this looks daunting. Some photos might not have any badges associated with them at all, some might have one or two badges, and some photos could show all five of the badge options.Today’s Question: I’ve been wanting to have some favorite images taken with the iPhone camera (all done raw) put into a Lightroom catalogue. Keep in mind that these badges will only appear on photos that meet the criteria for each badge. In other words, at least some adjustment settings have been changed from their default values. The adjustment badge indicates that any adjustments have been applied in the Develop module. Clicking on this badge will take you to the Develop module with the crop tool view enabled. The crop badge indicates that the image has been cropped in the Develop module. You can click on this badge to see a popup showing the collection(s) the image has been added to, and you can click a name of a collection on that popup list to navigate directly to that collection. The collections badge indicates that an image is included in one or more collections. Clicking on this map pushpin badge will take you to the Map module showing the location on the map where the photo was captured. This could be because you used a camera with a built-in GPS receiver to capture the photo, or that GPS coordinates were added to a photo later such as by dragging the photo onto the map in the Map module. The map pushpin icon indicates that GPS coordinates are included in metadata for a photo. If you are in any module other than the Library module you can click on this badge for an image on the filmstrip to be taken directly to the Library module. The keyword tag badge indicates that one or more keywords have been added to the metadata for a photo. There are five of these badge icons, and the meaning for each is as follows: The options for hiding or revealing these badges can be found on the menu under View > View Options for the grid view display, or on the Interface tab of the Preferences dialog for the filmstrip.īut what do these badge icons actually mean? These “badges” can be displayed on thumbnails in the grid view display or on the filmstrip on the bottom panel. In Lightroom Classic you may have noticed that some photos display one or more tiny icons at the bottom-right corner of the thumbnail.
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