

Next, I downloaded Lightroom CC from Apple’s app store. As you can see, it looks and feels like a Macbook – only running iOS instead of Mac OS, of course. I also purchased a bluetooth keyboard from Brydge Keyboards (which I highly recommend) to complete my setup. I lucked out and caught it on sale, which meant I walked away with my new setup for just over $1100. In the end, after a considerable amount of research, I purchased a 12.9″ iPad Pro with 512 GB of storage, as well as an Apple Pencil. I knew that I wanted to stay mobile, so a desktop wasn’t an option and being heavily invested already in the Apple ecosystem, I wasn’t looking at switching to a windows laptop. So, I decided to look into some possible alternatives.

I needed to upgrade, but an entry-level 15” Macbook pro with touch bar was going to set me back nearly $2000. In short, the joy of editing was fading, and instead had become a vicious test of patience every time I tried to upload my newest images. I was spending far more time staring at a rainbow-colored pinwheel than working on the images from my latest shoot.

However, for the serious photo hobbyist, or occasional gig shooter like myself, you might find that this setup/workflow suits your needs better than you would think.Īfter almost 10 years of solid use, my 15” Macbook pro had run its course, and Lightroom 6 had become nearly unusable. Lightroom CC – while definitely versatile – does not incorporate some key features such as the extensive file management options, batch editing functions, or varied exporting settings of its bigger brother, Lightroom Classic CC (Adobe could have come up with better names for these two applications, by the way). If that’s you, I probably would not suggest the workflow that I am about to present here, as I don’t feel at this point that it can meet the demands of a prolific full-time shooter. I will discuss in detail my basic workflow, as well as share some images I’ve edited using LR CC.īefore I begin, I will tell you that I’m not a full-time photographer, and, therefore, I am not culling through thousands of images every week as a professional photographer might do. In this article, I will share my recent experience of switching from a Macbook Pro running Lightroom 6, to a 12.9″ iPad Pro with the Apple Pencil, running Lightroom CC – and how this new setup has changed my photography workflow.
