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Here’s to a great Easter weekend, everybody! ?
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Give it a try yourself and see what you think. If you click on the blue “Create Album” button, it takes the 9 images my test clients selected (two different people) and puts them in their own separate album, so you can see which ones they chose.
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#ADOBE LIGHTROOM ONLINE UPDATE#
UPDATE Friday 4:04 pm ET: It’s working now (see below). Well, I believe that’s the plan anyway, but after clicking the refresh/sync button in the top right corner numerous times, none of the nine images selected by my test clients ever showed up. STEP FIVE: Their selects and comments will appear in the proofing panel. There are navigation arrows at the bottom of the screen to lead the viewer through the images to proof. Once logged in, they can see the images at a large size click the round checkmark to mark an image as a “pick” and leave comments that come right back to you in the proofing window. If you share that link with someone, to mark a photo as a selection, or to leave a comment on an image they will have to sign in with an Adobe logo (and it tells them that right on screen). STEP FOUR: If you click the clipboard icon next to the link, it copies the link to your clipboard. There’s nothing worse than sending a proof page with 120 shots, and your clients choose a 112 (Well, unless of course, you’re charging by the image). That way, you can limit their picks to 5 or 10 or whatever number works for you. What I like is that they give you the option of limiting the number of total picks the people you sent this link to can make. Here you can turn on Collaborative Proofing, and then it gives you a link where you can share this collection with anyone you’d like to give feedback on these images. Above your thumbnail grid you’ll see four tabs and the last one is the Proofing tab, so click on that tab to see the Collaborative Proofing options. STEP THREE: Now, click on the collection you want to have available for collaborative proofing. Turn on the checkbox for Collaborative Proofing and then click the Apply changes button (as seen here). STEP TWO: This brings up the Technology Previews window (shown above). From the pop-up menu that appears, choose “Technology Previews.” Then look up in the top left corner of the screen and you’ll see a blue pop-up dialog asking if you want to enable Collaborative Proofing. Then in your Web Browser go to and log-in with your Adobe ID. STEP ONE: You have to have synched a collection of images to Lightroom Mobile (Lightroom CC) to enable proofing, so that’s really your first step. Here’s a quick overview of the new “Collaborative Proofing” technology preview where it’s at right now in the development phase. If you need to send images to a client (or friend) as proofs you’ll find this really helpful (well, more so when it’s fully functional). It’s not a fully complete feature yet - it’s a “Technology Preview” so Adobe is still working on it, and still taking your feedback (in fact, they ask for it right on the proofing page, which I think is awesome).