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11 Tips and Tricks for Editing Underwater Photos in Adobe Lightroom

By Erin Quigley | Updated On January 31, 2024
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11 Tips and Tricks for Editing Underwater Photos in Adobe Lightroom

Adobe Lightroom Catalog Tutorial Tips Find Photos

Looking for your images in Adobe Lightroom? Go to the Catalog panel, then Library>Find All Missing Photos to track them down!

Erin Quigley

Lightroom is a deep program with amazing functionality. Despite — or maybe because of — the enormous amount of documentation available online and elsewhere, it can be tough to unearth overlooked but ­otherwise useful features. Here are 11 of my ­favorites.

LIBRARY MODULE SECRETS
Do you know where your ­images are? Select “All Photographs” in the Catalog Panel, and go to Library>Find All Missing Photos. If files have become unlinked or ­otherwise can’t be located by the Lightroom catalog, they’ll show up in a temporary collection and you can hunt them down for relinking. I do this as a general housekeeping chore at least once a week.

The Folders Panel reveals every image that’s been imported by Lightroom, but there might be other images hiding out in the referenced folders that Lightroom doesn’t know about. Control-click (Mac), or Right-click (PC) on any folder and choose “Synchronize Folder” from the contextual menu. Lightroom compares the contents of the folder with the catalog to see if there are any unreferenced images present. Check on “Show Import Dialog before Importing” to decide whether to bring in the squatters.

Adobe Lightroom Catalog Tutorial Tips Adjust Window How To

The shortcut to widen your panels in Adobe Lightroom is holding down Option (Mac users) or Alt (PC users) while you click and drag.

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You can change the width of the side panels by rolling the cursor over their inside border until you see a little double-headed arrow, then dragging to adjust. Holding down Option (Mac) or Alt (PC) while you click and drag expands the limits of how wide the panels can be made. This is useful if you have lots of nested ­folders and you find that the names are cut off or hard to read.

Use the keyboard shortcut “X” to mark clunker images for deletion, then Command-Delete (Mac) or Control-Backspace/­Delete (PC) to trash them all at once. This saves you from having to answer the same question from ­Lightroom for every image you want to ­delete. Choose “Delete from Disk,” not Adobe’s default of “Remove,” or the images will be removed from the Lightroom catalog but not from your drive.

Adobe Lightroom Catalog Tutorial Tips Deleting Catalog Photos

To delete unwanted images from Adobe Lightroom, be sure to choose "Delete from Disk" instead of "Remove."

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DEVELOP-MODULE SECRETS

Pimp your grid by going to View>View Options, Grid View Tab and choosing Expanded Cells from the first drop-down menu. Go down to the Expanded Cell Extras panel and choose up to four bits of information to display on your image thumbnails. I use File Name, Capture Date/Time, Copy Name and Cropped Dimensions. In Loupe view, toggling “I” cycles through two sets of info that can be configured similarly in the Loupe View Tab of View Options.

Adobe Lightroom Catalog Tutorial Tips Grid View

Update your grid by going to the Expanded Cell Extras panel and choosing the information you want displayed.

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Adobe Lightroom Catalog Tutorial Tips Keyboard Shortcuts

Reveal a Clipping Preview while editing Exposure, Highlights, Shadows, Whites or Blacks in Adobe Lightroom.

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In the Basic Panel, holding down Option (Mac) or Alt (PC) while sliding Exposure, Highlights, Shadows, Whites or Blacks reveals a Clipping Preview that lets you see exactly when you start to clip (lose data) in your image. In the Detail Panel, holding down Option/Alt while sliding the Sharpening and Noise Reduction sliders produces a grayscale version of the image, which makes adjustments easier to see.

Adobe Lightroom Catalog Tutorial Tips Before and After

How to compare before and after views in Adobe Lightroom.

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It’s important to ­frequently compare Before and After Views while editing. The backslash “\” key shows a full-image, before- and-after view; tapping “Y” toggles a side-by-side view. By default, the Before state is set to whatever’s at the bottom of the History panel. Control-click (Mac) or Right-click (PC) on any History state to reveal a contextual menu. Choose “Copy History Step Settings to Before” to set that History state as the new Before view.

Adobe Lightroom Catalog Tutorial Tips Toggle Overlays

In the Crop Tool, tapping “X” exchanges horizontal and vertical crops. Tapping “O” ­repeatedly toggles overlays that represent ­various compositional principals or commonly used aspect ratios.

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Option-apostrophe (Mac) or Alt-apostrophe (PC) switches the orientation of a ­graduated ­filter, and toggles the Invert checkbox on and off when using a radial filter.

Adobe Lightroom Catalog Tutorial Tips Solo Mode

Activating Solo Mode in the Develop panel is a huge time saver for those working on laptops.

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Activate Solo Mode to ­automatically keep only one Develop panel open at a time. This is a huge timesaver, ­especially if you’re working on a laptop. As you open a new panel, whatever’s already open automatically collapses, saving you from continually scrolling up and down to find the tools you need. Control-click (Mac) or Right-click (PC) on the dark gray area of any panel, and check Solo Mode on in the ensuing menu. From the same menu, you can ­toggle any Develop panel on or off.

For quick video color-­correction in Lightroom, ­extract a JPEG still frame from the clip, edit it in the Develop ­Module, and ­synchronize the changes back to the original in the Library ­Module. Lightroom isn’t a full-­featured ­video editor, but it’s perfect for dabblers who just want to throw a few clips up onto social media. You’ll find a detailed tutorial on video editing in Lightroom at goaskerin.com.

See all of Erin Quigley’s Editing Tutorials Here


Erin Quigley is an Adobe ACE certified digital-imaging consultant and an award-winning shooter. GoAskErin.com provides custom tutorials and one-on-one instruction for the underwater photographic community.