How to get Faster JPEG Exports from Lightroom
My buddy Terry White turned me on to this technique that he picked up from Lloyd L. Chamber’s Macintosh Performance Guide (which is published online “for Digital Photographers & Performance Addicts”).
Anyway, Lloyd did a really great article on Optimizing Lightroom, and within it he specifically tackled the problem of slow JPEG exporting from Lightroom (if you decide to export a couple of hundred Raw photos as JPEGs, I can tell you from experience; it takes a while).
Anyway, after many hours of research (aided by his background as a longtime software engineer) he learned a way where you can just about cut the export time in half, by manually having Lightroom do multiple exports at the same time. So, if you have 210 Raw photos you want to export as JPEGs, rather than selecting all of them and hitting Export, instead you’d select 105 of them, set them to Export, then select the remaining 105 and then export those.
Since Lightroom can do more than one process at a time, it chunks away at both batches of images simultaneously, speeding things up pretty dramatically. In fact, he found that you could actually split the group of 210 raw photos into three groups, and it will chunk all three (but beyond three groups of JPEG conversions, it doesn’t work as well).
He also found that this works differently on different types of machines (for example, if you have just a dual-core machine, two JPEG exports at once is really about the max it will do without slowing things down).
Anyway, you can read his full article here online, but I want to take my hat off to Lloyd for sharing this information, and I’m hoping Adobe is reading it, too, and that Adobe takes more advantage of Lightroom’s ability to simultaniously process multiple tasks in the next version.




















great tip! thanks
My computer is a single processor and I hated exporting thanks for sharing this great tip as it has cut down my client time.
Rich
Thanks Scott – great tip. The longest part for me is once I export the images to JPEG I normally run a sharpening action in CS3. This part really takes a long time when I have 800 images from a wedding to get through. I have the 8 Core Mac Pro with 8GB ram but it would still take 40 mins or so for the whole process. Any tips on making the photoshop actions run faster.
Great tip & much needed … thanks!
Wow. So simple but ingenious.
That is so cool!! Thanks for the tip
Don’t forget the utility “Instant JPEG from RAW”
http://www.rawworkflow.com/instant-jpeg-from-raw-utility/
Not Lightroom specific but faster than fast if you just need a quick jpg.
Glad to see you talk about this article. I ran across it the other day when trying to decide whether quad core or dual core was the way to go with a new build. Hopefully Adobe is listening because I know most of us just walk away during an export and want it to happen as fast as possible. Keep on Adobe for us Scott. LR 2 has the stuff we need, now Adobe can just keep working on getting it faster.
Thanks for the tip Scott, even some cut down in export time helps with large volume of photos.
I have a question about LR contact sheet printing, maybe you have some tricks in your pocket. Basically I am preparing contact sheets for the modelling agency and I need to add my own logo and model’s name on the page. I use identity plate for my own logo but LR doesn’t seem to have any more overlaying objects so I end up exporting the sheet with thumbnails and my logo as JPEG and adding model’s name in Photoshop. Is there a way to customize layout engine to add some more overlaying objects or maybe there is third party plugin (googling didn’t give me much) ?
Thanks.
Olá Scott,
admiro muito seu trabalho, tenho comprado todos seus livros, quando traduzido para o Português Brasil (digo traduzido, que como pode ver, não sei inglês) – Comprei aqui o livro “Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 2 para Fotógrafos Digitais” veio impresso em preto e branco, então, textos escritos como: “Veja as cores saturadas” ou “Marcado aqui em vermelho” não vi nada!! Sei que isto é coisa da editora aqui de meu Pais, infelizmente.
Um grande abraço e sucesso, se puder mencione o site Lightroom Brasil (www.lightroom.com.br ) em seu Blog.
Martins
Lightroom Brasil
http://www.lightroombrasil.com.br
I did a few tests with an older single core Windows machine and was consistently able to shed 6 minutes off the export time of 200 raw files by splitting it into 2 exports.
A quick way to do the second export, after the Export dialog goes away and the first export is running:
- go to Edit > Invert Selection
- then, File > Export with previous (Ctrl + Alt + Shift + E or Command + Option + Shift + E)
That is brilliant Rob! Thanks!
Thanks for this tip Scott. I just exported a bunch of files yesterday and was a bit flustered by the export time. Rock on!
Great tip, Scoot.
But I’ve got a question. When your book (The Digital Photography volume 3) will translated for polish language?
Jason, hide your palettes (Shift-Tab) while letting your actions run, and see if that helps.
As always, I learned something new here! Seriously, thanks for sharing all the great information all the time Scott!
Guest blogger tomorrow is?….:)
If Lightroom starts a thread for this, it means that the more core you have the more thread can run in “real” parallel!
So 8-core, it should be safe to divide the work in 8 chunks…
Sad that Lightroom does not do this automatically… They should use the TBB library from Intel
LOL “just have a dual-core”… I’m working off of a few Single-core PC’s (though in my heart I know I should trade it all in for a mac).
Maybe next time – I figure no matter what I do exporting batches will be slow and thus “coffee time” or “go to sleep and wake up with it done” time.
Thank you for sharing this tip! I have been recently exporting a lot of files… and seemed like I had to leave my computer on for couple of nights to have it all done, without affecting everything else I needed to do.
Thanks for mentioning my writeup Scott.
The other area I’ve researched is Photoshop, under “Optimizing Photoshop” at MacPerformanceGuide.com. The same stuff that helps Photoshop will also help Lightroom performance, though sometimes sneaky tricks remains necessary!
I hope Lightroom boosts this export performance in their next release. It is the slowest part of my workflow. Especially when I export of 1000 pictures from my 5D Mark II.
I hope you do not mind if I posted a link on digg