Lightroom vs Photoshop: Which Should You Learn First?
This is one of the most common questions new photographers ask. And the answer is simpler than you think.
Learn Lightroom first. Then learn Photoshop.
Here's why — and when you'll need each one.
What Lightroom Does Best
Lightroom is your daily driver. It's where you'll spend 90% of your editing time.
Lightroom is for:
- Organizing your entire photo library (catalogs, folders, ratings, keywords)
- Global adjustments — exposure, contrast, white balance, highlights, shadows
- Color grading — HSL sliders, tone curves, split toning
- Batch editing — edit one photo, sync the settings to 500 others
- Presets — save your editing style and apply it with one click
- Export — resize, sharpen, and export for web, print, or social media
If you're a portrait photographer, event photographer, or content creator, Lightroom handles 90% of what you need.
What Photoshop Does Best
Photoshop is your specialist tool. It's for the edits that Lightroom can't do.
Photoshop is for:
- Retouching — removing blemishes, smoothing skin, whitening teeth
- Compositing — combining multiple images into one
- Object removal — removing distracting elements from a scene
- Text and graphics — adding watermarks, creating social media templates
- Advanced manipulation — head swaps, background replacement, frequency separation
- Layers and masks — non-destructive editing with precise control
If you're doing beauty retouching, product photography, or creative composites, Photoshop is essential.
The Workflow: How They Work Together
Professional photographers don't choose one or the other. They use both:
- Import photos into Lightroom
- Cull — rate and flag your keepers
- Edit in Lightroom — exposure, color, tone
- Send to Photoshop for retouching (right-click → Edit in Photoshop)
- Save — it automatically comes back to Lightroom
- Export from Lightroom for delivery
This round-trip workflow is how the pros do it. Lightroom for the broad strokes, Photoshop for the fine details.
Common Mistakes Beginners Make
Over-editing in Lightroom
Cranking clarity to 100, maxing out vibrance, and pushing shadows all the way up. The result looks processed and unnatural. Subtlety is the mark of a good editor.
Using Photoshop for Everything
Opening every single photo in Photoshop when a simple Lightroom adjustment would do. This wastes hours. Use the right tool for the job.
Not Learning Keyboard Shortcuts
Both programs have shortcuts that save massive amounts of time. Learn them early and you'll edit 3x faster.
Ignoring Color Calibration
Your edits look different on every screen because your monitor isn't calibrated. A basic calibration tool (like a Datacolor SpyderX) ensures your colors are accurate.
How Long Does It Take to Learn?
- Lightroom basics: 1 day of focused training
- Lightroom proficiency: 2-4 weeks of regular practice
- Photoshop basics: 1 day of focused training
- Photoshop proficiency: Months of practice (it's a deep program)
The fastest way to learn is with structured, hands-on instruction — not YouTube rabbit holes.
Learn Both in Two Days
At Alberta Film School's Intro to Photo Editing Workshop [blocked], you'll spend Day 1 mastering Lightroom and Day 2 diving into Photoshop. AFS provides computers with all software installed — you just show up and learn.
Workshop details: 2 days, 12:00 PM – 5:00 PM, $499 + GST (or $249/day purchased separately). Join the waitlist [blocked] to get notified when the next dates are announced.
Ready to take the next step?
Join the Photo Editing Workshop Waitlist