(FFF files created using the FlexColor software are not supported)įor more information about supported cameras, lenses and bug patches, see Adobe’s blogpost on the update.
There’s a full list of newly supported cameras after the jump. Many of the newly supported cameras are recently announced ILCs from a number of major manufacturers, including the Olympus E-P3, E-P元, and E-PM1 the DMC-G3 and DMC-GF3 the Pentax Q and Sony Alpha NEX-C3 and NEX-5N.
The update has also patched a number of bugs from both applications, but there is one major known issue in Lightroom 3: if you use Mac OS X 10.7, you will no longer have tethered support for the Canon 5D, 350D/Rebel XT, or 20D. We get a small commission for purchases made through these links, which helps run this site.Today saw Adobe update Lightroom and Camera Raw with support for 23 new cameras, as well as 27 new lens profiles, mostly from Hasselblad. Note that this post contains paid affiliate links. If you want to discuss anything you’ve read here on my website, or saw on my youtube channel, or if you want to share images you’ve created using any of my techniques or presets, then I’ve started a new Facebook Group just for that. If you use either of these applications, then check out my range of custom made Looks in the form of presets for Lightroom, and Styles for Capture One. If you’d rather not use Patreon, but still want to say thanks or help, then you can feed my caffeine habit and buy me a coffee via PayPal with a one off donation to my PayPal tip jar. Check out my Patreon Page for more details, and a big thanks to everyone already supporting this blog on Patreon. New Camera Support: Canon PowerShot S100 Fuji FinePix X10 Leica V-LUX 3 Nikon 1 V1 Nikon 1 J1 Panasonic. These updates include bug fixes, new camera support and new lens profiles. There are a number of options available with different rewards, such as behind the scenes content, special Patreon only videos and more. Lightroom 3.6 and Camera Raw 6.6 are now available as final releases on and through the update mechanisms available in Photoshop CS5 and Lightroom 3. If you like what you see here and you find this useful, then you can help support this blog and help me keep making great content like this by supporting me on Patreon for as little as $1 a month. Will we see this with other manufacturer’s cameras too? Is this Adobe beginning to push people to use their profiles? If you’re a Canon shooter who has bought or is planning to buy any of these cameras, I’d like to know what you think of this. Given that Canon is still the market share leader this seems like a big oversight, and I really would like to know why.Īnyway, perhaps I’m missing something, or perhaps it’s an issue with the sample files I downloaded from DpReview but I don’t think so. I’m pretty sure Adobe was calibrating these themselves, so it’s not like it was an issue getting information from the manfacturer. I really don’t know why they’ve stopped doing this for Canon. How big a deal this is depends on how important it is to you to match the colour output of the in-camera jpegs, but based on what I reported with the RP, the Adobe profiling using the non camera matching profiles seems to me to be quite a bit off and not particularly great (on the RP that is, I haven't tested the R5 and R6 fully yet, but based on some initial experimentation with sample RAW files from DP Review and comparing them in Lightroom and Canon's own software, the colors seem significantly off again).
I had thought that maybe this was an oversight because these were “consumer” cameras, but they don’t seem to have added any for the R5 or R6 either, which are clearly in the professional realm.
It brings support for 16 additional cameras, including the Canon EOS 70D, Fujifilm X-M1, and Sony RX100 II, along with new lens profiles and bug fixes. ACR 8.2 is designed to work with Photoshop CC but, as promised, is also compatible with Photoshop CS6. This isn’t the first time this has happened either, and the last few Canon releases, including the Eos 90D and Eos RP didn’t have profile support either. Adobe has released Camera Raw 8.2 and Lightroom 5.2, as final versions of updates that were originally posted as 'release candidates'.
Unless I’m going mad, there doesn’t seem to be any camera matching profiles for any of the new Canon Cameras. The following Canon camera models support Live View in Lightroom Classic: Canon EOS 5D Mark III. While there isn’t too much to say about this release other than that, there is one thing about this update that is a little worrying. These are mostly bug fixes and new camera support, but they do add support for the recent releases from Canon, namely the Eos R5 and Eos R6. Adobe has just released a whole bunch of updates across its creative cloud lineup, including updates to Lightroom and Lightroom Classic and the corresponding release of Camera Raw.