If you swipe through photos on the Mac using a Magic Mouse, Trackpad or similar peripheral, Lightroom scrolls very fast.SIGMA 50mm f1.4 ART lens was incorrectly identified as Zeiss Milvus 50mm f1.4.Lightroom would not display the correct EXIF metadata for some video files generated by Canon, Fuji and Panasonic cameras.In Lights Out mode, an image would “disappear” when using the Undo functionality.Import didn’t work if you weren’t signed in.Importing folders that included videos could fail on some systems.Import from iPhoto would result in all photos receiving a “pick” flag.
Tethering Nikon cameras on Mac OS X 10.11(El Capitan) did not work properly.Large previews build preemptively when navigating through photos in Loupe zoomed view.
Note that tethering Leica cameras on Mac 10.11 El Capitan is still not working – it’s waiting on an update from Leica.Click to view the full list of cameras supported for tethering.Supported Nikon cameras are now working again on Mac 10.11 El Capitan.Click to view the full list of supported cameras.Panorama image © 2015 Paul McFarlane New camera support: It has a slider ranging from 0-100, so you can choose how far to warp the image, and it retains the editing flexibility of the original raw files. It analyzes the image and warps it to fill the empty space. Lightroom CC 2015.4 has a new feature in the Panorama Merge dialog – Boundary Warp.Use Content-Aware Fill in Photoshop – this works well but may need additional retouching to remove artifacts and results in a large rendered file on your hard drive.Crop the edges off – however you may crop important details in the process.There are a number of options for filling in the gaps: Stitched panoramas usually have gaps around the edges. You’ll find this in Preferences > Lightroom mobile. Mobile users can now set the location and folder structure for photos added using Lightroom mobile or Lightroom web. Also, panoramas should merge about twice as fast as they did in Lightroom 6.3. Thumbnails now update much faster when you edit multiple images using sync or copy and paste, and Lightroom’s now much smarter about preemptively building 1:1 previews, which means they load much faster when you’re zoomed in and flipping through photos, even if they weren’t built in advance. Other smaller updates are listed with the bug fixes at the bottom of the post. The Lightroom team have been busy working on performance, as well as a couple of other CC only improvements. (For the update links, skip to the end of the post.) So what’s new? Lightroom CC 2015.4 and Lightroom 6.4 have been released today, with Nikon/El Capitan tethering fixes, performance improvements and new CC features, as well as the usual new camera/ lens support and bug fixes.