10 Adobe Lightroom Tips For Improving Your Smartphone Photos

Adobe Lightroom mobile showing logo
Smartphones can take amazing photos and Lightroom is one of the best mobile photo editing tools, but using the app can be tricky for photography beginners. This Lightroom Mobile tutorial is not meant to teach you what every option and slider does, but it includes some great Lightroom tips to get started. We aim to show you the main edits you can use to take your smartphone photos to the next level.
Here is the starting photo:
Lightroom edit original shot
Shot with Huawei Mate 20 Pro
  1. Shoot RAW
  2. Presets
  3. Exposure
  4. White balance
  5. Colors
  1. Noise
  2. Perspective
  3. Crop
  4. Healing
  5. Selective edits

Let’s talk money first

Adobe Lightroom, as it is labeled in the Google Play Store, is simply the mobile version of Lightroom CC (where CC stands for “Creative Cloud”). While you can download the mobile Adobe Lightroom app and take advantage of many features for free, using this software to its full extent requires an Adobe Creative Cloud subscription.
Adobe Creative Cloud prices:
  • Photography plan ($9.99/mo): Lightroom, Lightroom Classic, Photoshop, and 20GB of cloud storage.
  • Lightroom plan ($9.99/mo): Lightroom, and 1 TB of cloud storage.
  • Photography Plan ($19.99/mo): Lightroom, Lightroom Classic, Photoshop, and 1 TB of cloud storage.
Free users miss out on these features:
  • Cloud storage: You are not paying for cloud storage, so that feature is out the window.
  • RAW support: Yes, you can edit RAW photos straight from your phone, but only if you pay.
  • Adobe Sensei: Adobe Sensei identifies and tags photos for you. It comes in handy when searching specific images. It also has People View, which uses facial recognition to organize images by person.
  • Selective adjustments: Want to edit only specific areas of a photo? Not for free, you won’t!
  • Healing brush: Get rid of trash, dust, or any imperfection with the healing brush.
  • Geometry: This is a great tool for fixing perspective and straightening your photos.
  • Web sharing: You can showcase images through the web. Simply invite people or share a link. Users can like and comment on images.
  • Batch editing: Batch editing saves time, so Adobe figures people will pay for it.
With all that in mind, you will have to decide whether a subscription is worth the cash or not. Just be mindful that we will be including some of these paid features in this list of Adobe Lightroom tips and tricks.

1. Shoot RAW

Adoe Lightroom mobile RAW support
The first Lightroom tip we can give you is to shoot RAW, if your phone supports it. Check out our dedicated post if you don’t know what RAW is. In a nutshell, a RAW photo is an uncompressed image file. It stores more data and offers advanced editing freedom. A user can adjust white balance, exposure, pull more detail, and more, without affecting image quality as much. On the contrary, JPEG files are compressed, edited by camera software, and have less data to work with.
Not all smartphones output RAW image files, but it is becoming more popular with the latest handsets. One of Lightroom’s main features is that it can edit RAW photos. And not just your phone’s RAW files, it’s possible to transfer other cameras’ RAW images to your phone’s local storage and edit them using the mobile app. Alternatively, one can use cloud syncing to upload images through another computer, tablet, or smartphone, then edit them on Lightroom mobile.

2. Take a look at presets

Think of Lightroom presets as filters, but they are more customizable and can be quite complex if you dig into them. When editing a photo, scroll through the options below to find the Presets section. Select it and you can look through a series of effects and edit styles to quickly choose from.
Not liking the presets you see? You can create your own or even download them. Plenty of photography enthusiasts and professionals online offer their presets for download (often for a price). These can be synced to your mobile device via the cloud, using the desktop Lightroom app.
Presets are nice quick edits for those who don’t want to spend much time tinkering with post-processing. Keep reading if you want more control over your shot’s final outcome.
  • I looked through available presets until I found one that didn’t change the integrity of the image too much, but enhanced the colors and overall look of the photo. Turquoise & Red was under the “Creative” section of the Presets. This is a demonstration of what you can achieve with a simple preset. This preset will be removed and I will edit the photo myself throughout the rest of this article.

3. Fix exposure and lighting

Smartphone cameras mostly do a good job exposing an image properly, but they can get things wrong sometimes. Sometimes creativity calls for a darker (or brighter) image than what would be considered “correctly exposed” too. Regardless, playing with exposure controls should be your first move.
You will find these options under the Light button on the bottom of the screen. Pay close attention to the exposure slider. Move it left and right until you find the correct levels. Play with the contrast, highlights, shadows, whites, and blacks to achieve the right lighting effect.
  • Increased exposure to brighten image.
  • Reduced highlights and whites to get more detail from the clouds.
  • Increased shadows and brightened blacks to get more detail from foliage and building.
  • Increased contrast for more striking colors.

4. Fix white balance

To fix the white balance go to the Color section. White balance is customized with the temperature and tint sliders. Temperature can make an image more blue or orange, while tint goes from green to magenta.
You can play with these creatively to add special effects to your photos. If what you are looking for is a realistic white balance, you can also use the eyedropper tool. Simply tap on the eyedropper icon and select a white or neutral color (gray) area within your shot to achieve an accurate white balance.

5. Make colors pop

The color section will also have the vibrance and saturation sliders. I like using these to make colors pop more, but you can also move them to the left to mute them. Just be careful not to go too crazy with these options. Increasing the vibrance and saturation by much can give your images an over-processed look.
  • Increased saturation and vibrance to make colors pop more.

6. Reduce noise

Got a grainy image? This is common when taking images in the dark, as the ISO needs to be increased, therefore producing more noise. Images can be cleaned up by going to the Detail section and using the noise reduction slider. Be careful not to use it too much, as it softens images. This can reduce detail and make skin look too smooth.
By the way, you can also add grain if you want to give your photos an interesting look. The grain amount slider is under the Effects section.
  • Image was very low on noise, so you likely won’t notice the difference here. I reduced noise by 10 just to clean up grain visible when zooming in.

7. Fix perspective

A bad perspective is one of the most frustrating photography mistakes you can come across, especially when you want a photo to be truly straight. Don’t get too upset next time your photo is slightly crooked; most times it can be fixed using the geometry tool in Lightroom. Just find the Geometry section in the option carousel and tap on it.
You can use the sliders to straighten up the photo. I also like using the Guided Upright tool. Simply tap on the Guided Upright icon and draw lines following crooked elements, both vertically and horizontally. The system will automatically straighten the image accordingly.
  • This photo’s perspective is skewed because of the wide-angle lens. I slightly fixed this by using the distortion slider. I didn’t want to go too far because it would cut important parts of the image off, but the trees are now a little more straight, as is the building in the back.

8. Crop

Sometimes fixing perspective is a little too much. Maybe your photo just needs some trimming. In this case, go to the Crop section in Lightroom. Rotate and crop accordingly. Make sure to keep composition in mind, as cropping an image to little or too much can leave it worse.
  • The grass area was overpowering. It takes attention from the London Eye and the building next to it. I cropped a large part of it to better focus on the subject while also keeping the beautiful greenery visible.

9. Remove unwanted objects

Sometimes you take an amazing photo only to later find out you also captured an annoying piece of trash next to your subject. This also happens when shooting random objects, which can have dust, dirt, lint, and other annoying distractions. Maybe you don’t want a portrait to show your friend’s latest pimple. Thankfully, Adobe’s software is very smart and it can help you get rid of imperfections.
Select the Healing option to clean your image up. Tap and drag up/down on the icons to the left to select size, feather, and opacity of your healing brush. Tap on the imperfection and make sure your brush covers it completely. Alternatively, you can tap, hold, and drag to cover more area. The app is smart enough to pick the right area of the image to heal from, but if it gets things wrong you can drag the selections around.
  • There aren’t many elements I would like to remove from this image. I got rid of a few heads and far away people on the left side of the image, under the building, just to show you what the tool can do.

10. Selective edits and effects

Selective edits can help you customize specific areas within your image. This tool is useful when a section of your photo is overexposed, or maybe you just want to make something darker to bring more attention to your subject. These are a couple examples, but you can selectively alter many things, such as color, white balance, sharpness, noise, etc.
Tap on the Selective section in the Lightroom app, press the “+” button, and pick which kind of selection you want. The brush will let you manually select areas within a photo as you wish. You can also use oval selective edits and gradients. The latter can be used to smoothly fade effects through an image.
After you select the area you want to customize, just start editing as you wish using the buttons below. You will find Light, Color, Effects, Detail, and Optics options.
  • Used the gradient tool to darken the area on the left side of the sky. Made it darker to pull more cloud details and make the sky bits more blue.

A great photographer is good at both shooting and editing. There is much more you need to learn about editing, but these Lightroom tips are sure to help you greatly enhance your image quality.
Lastly, here is a comparison between the original image and the final edit.
Do you know any particularly good Lightroom tips? Share them in the comments.
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