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  #1  
Old 04-11-2024, 06:14 PM
makoti makoti is offline
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OT: Photo editing software I would OWN?

I have a very old version of Lightroom, which worked well for me, but I want to update. If I try to do LR, I have to move to a subscription based model. I'd rather not pay $120 a year for it and never actually own it.

What do you have that is similar (or better. I'll take better) that doesn't require you to rent it? I don't need to power of a full-on Photoshop program, but editing, creating layers, and doing HDR stacking would be musts.

EDIT to ask about freeware: Anyone use DARKTABLE or RAW THERAPEE?

Last edited by makoti; 04-11-2024 at 07:34 PM.
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  #2  
Old 04-11-2024, 06:16 PM
unterhausen unterhausen is offline
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Have you tried Gimp?
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  #3  
Old 04-11-2024, 06:50 PM
RoosterCogset RoosterCogset is offline
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Subscribed. I'm still on my owned version of LR and Adobe photoshop. No subscription but they still work with my camera's files (which ain't too new but works well enough). But am curious what there is out there that doesn't require a subscription.
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  #4  
Old 04-11-2024, 07:03 PM
.RJ .RJ is offline
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I understand the concern about the software ownership... but... the new versions of Lightroom are really and truly amazing. Really its wonderful.

The new features they've rolled into the software make photo editing faster, easier and better and every few months there's a new thing - no waiting 1-3 years for a new version, you get the new stuff as soon as its ready and its pushed out. Things that would take an hour in photoshop are done in minutes in LR now.

100% just make the leap, its worth it if you're at all serious about photography.
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  #5  
Old 04-11-2024, 07:32 PM
makoti makoti is offline
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Originally Posted by unterhausen View Post
Have you tried Gimp?
Not in many years
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  #6  
Old 04-11-2024, 07:33 PM
makoti makoti is offline
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Originally Posted by .RJ View Post
I understand the concern about the software ownership... but... the new versions of Lightroom are really and truly amazing. Really its wonderful.

The new features they've rolled into the software make photo editing faster, easier and better and every few months there's a new thing - no waiting 1-3 years for a new version, you get the new stuff as soon as its ready and its pushed out. Things that would take an hour in photoshop are done in minutes in LR now.

100% just make the leap, its worth it if you're at all serious about photography.
I'm seeing this take in quite a few places I'm looking. Might come to that.
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  #7  
Old 04-11-2024, 08:46 PM
gavingould gavingould is offline
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been using LR since version 1.0, and while I may not like the subscription model… it does give me all the latest features, supports all the newest cameras, and runs on all the most updated operating systems, including mobile - I do the vast majority of my editing on an iPad Pro.

I think Capture One still does a non-subscription version? But it might be out of date in a year, not handle newer cameras, not work on future operating systems, etc.
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  #8  
Old 04-11-2024, 10:20 PM
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CSKeller CSKeller is offline
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I liked Lightroom when you could simply buy the program and have it on your computer. I hated that they moved to a subscription service and all of it 'in the cloud' and it seemed to require Internet to use.

I moved to ON1 and love it!! It works great, easy to use and is yours for use on 2 computers I think. Cost is reasonable to me and I can choose to upgrade if I want. My current version is a couple years old so I may get the updated version later this year.

https://www.on1.com/
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  #9  
Old 04-12-2024, 07:10 AM
Tall Tall is offline
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Originally Posted by makoti View Post
Not in many years
As a GIMP and Lightroom (I get free access via work) user: GIMP isn't really a Lightroom substitute.
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  #10  
Old 04-12-2024, 08:03 AM
.RJ .RJ is offline
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Originally Posted by CSKeller View Post
I liked Lightroom when you could simply buy the program and have it on your computer. I hated that they moved to a subscription service and all of it 'in the cloud' and it seemed to require Internet to use.
You still "have it on your computer", you dont need an internet connection (other than cloud backups) and you can stop the subscription anytime, its not like the software is bricked if you stop paying for it, you just stop getting software updates. Good grief.

I am not sure where the aversion for the subscription model comes from - going on cost, its really not much different if you planned to upgrade with each new version and you get the new features much faster instead of waiting 12-18 months for the next release. And if you use any of the other apps its much cheaper than previously buying them individually.

Again, if you're serious, its the best tool available and the wealth of knowledge available on youtube makes it very easy to get the most out of it. Intersecting masks is really an amazing time saver.
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  #11  
Old 04-12-2024, 08:11 AM
benb benb is offline
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I rented LR for a long time I have a stupidly huge collection of photos.

I stopped in 2020. The program had become so bloated and slow and the Adobe tech support forums were full of people complaining they just spent $6k on a brand new super high end computer and LR was still super slow. Adobe was pretty much telling them they were cheap and needed a better computer than they just bought, which was outrageous.

You gotta really decide how bad you want this. If you have a Mac Apple Photos is the remnants of Aperture, and it has pretty excellent performance. You would then need to add on something extra for layers and some of the other stuff. There are lots of programs you can buy on the app store and actually own that can fill in the functionality. Using Apple Photos has library management issues if you have terabytes of photos like I do, but Lightroom basically has all those issues too, and you pay for it to have those issues. Basically with either program you really need to think about breaking your collection into time based libraries and selection based libraries, which takes a lot of time. Theoretically if I had no job I'd spend a few weeks breaking my photos down into year by year libraries. Then I'd go through and select all the best photos in each one and export them into a portfolio library. Once you went through that the ongoing work to maintain it is not bad.

I have tried darktable as well. The biggest issue there is what are you doing with your photos? I have a really nice printer. Linux + a high end printer is kind of a waste of time. It would be one thing for me to join the community with darktable and help fix a bug here or there that effected me. I don't have the time for it, but I could do it. At one point I worked on an HP printer driver for linux too. But with the time I have now, if I want to use my fancy printer to print photos then linux is kind of a waste of time. Realistically any time you use linux to facilitate some kind of computer hobby you are not really spending your whole time on the hobby, you are going to become a linux hobbyist as well.

If you have a ton of photos you need to think about backup too. I have them on a NAS, but I don't have a cloud backup, I have never managed to find a way to do that which didn't cost an arm and a leg and wouldn't also require me to have a ton of time to do the whole thing. My library is vastly too big to upload to a cloud backup. Last time I looked I couldn't do the hard drive start either, but it's been a few years, maybe that is possible now if one of them can send a 4TB HDD to your house and you can mail it back.

Cloud backups are easy if you shoot with a smartphone. If you have hundreds of thousands of DSLR RAW files not so much. Again all goes back to needing a whole bunch of free time to review and delete and categorize.

Last edited by benb; 04-12-2024 at 08:16 AM.
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  #12  
Old 04-12-2024, 08:12 AM
jamesdak jamesdak is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by .RJ View Post
You still "have it on your computer", you dont need an internet connection (other than cloud backups) and you can stop the subscription anytime, its not like the software is bricked if you stop paying for it, you just stop getting software updates. Good grief.

I am not sure where the aversion for the subscription model comes from - going on cost, its really not much different if you planned to upgrade with each new version and you get the new features much faster instead of waiting 12-18 months for the next release. And if you use any of the other apps its much cheaper than previously buying them individually.

Again, if you're serious, its the best tool available and the wealth of knowledge available on youtube makes it very easy to get the most out of it. Intersecting masks is really an amazing time saver.
Well I guess it's the same concept as why I own my home vs rent, why I own my cars vs lease, etc. Call me old fashioned but I don't buy into the concept of routinely throwing away money for something I don't really have. Of course I don't have to have the latest and greatest either and fail to understand that mindset in most cases either.

Fortunately my camera's are still supported by CS6 and I don't see moving beyond that anyway.
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  #13  
Old 04-12-2024, 08:35 AM
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Mr. Pink Mr. Pink is offline
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Ex pro retoucher here.

It's all about Monopoly power, and Adobe is a monopoly. Sure, there are other programs, they come and go, but, (A) Are they as good as LR and Photoshop? No, and, (B) Will they be around in five years and enjoy massive support, both from Adobe and third party users (check out YouTube instruction)? Maybe they'll survive, but good luck maximizing their potential. Takes a long time to learn both programs. Hate to see all of that learning vanish when the company goes bust. Adobe ain't going nowhere.

Problem is the expensive dance between new version updates and new Apple upgrades. You have to buy a new computer every five to eight years in order to load the latest OS in order to use the latest Photoshop. I'm stuck right now with a now obsolete trashcan Mac, but, I'm moving, so, in a few months, I guess. The latest Mac Minis are pretty cool. But that one will be a paperweight in less than a decade. But, that's ok, the only thing I'm really missing is the generative AI features in Photoshop, and they depress me anyway, because they are a push button function that makes many of my skills obsolete.
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  #14  
Old 04-12-2024, 08:37 AM
makoti makoti is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by .RJ View Post
You still "have it on your computer", you dont need an internet connection (other than cloud backups) and you can stop the subscription anytime, its not like the software is bricked if you stop paying for it, you just stop getting software updates. Good grief.

I am not sure where the aversion for the subscription model comes from - going on cost, its really not much different if you planned to upgrade with each new version and you get the new features much faster instead of waiting 12-18 months for the next release. And if you use any of the other apps its much cheaper than previously buying them individually.

Again, if you're serious, its the best tool available and the wealth of knowledge available on youtube makes it very easy to get the most out of it. Intersecting masks is really an amazing time saver.
Not having any subscription service programs (I have very few of any kind. I hate the monthly paper cuts), I thought that if I stop paying, it all goes away. Not the case? I'm sure you lose access to everything in the cloud. If you back it up locally, you still have full useability, just no updates?
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  #15  
Old 04-12-2024, 08:58 AM
palincss palincss is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Tall View Post
As a GIMP and Lightroom (I get free access via work) user: GIMP isn't really a Lightroom substitute.
No, Darktable is the usual open source go-to substitute for Lightroom, whereas GIMP is similar to PhotoShop.

https://www.darktable.org/

Last edited by palincss; 04-12-2024 at 09:01 AM.
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