Why does Lightroom show a pixelated preview after each edit until it finishes loading?
Asked 8/18/2011
3 views
2 answers
0
In Lightroom 3 Develop mode, my photo looks sharp at first, but after I adjust anything like saturation, fill light, or sharpening, the image temporarily becomes blocky/pixelated, almost like an enlarged thumbnail. If I zoom in, Lightroom shows “Loading...” and then the image becomes sharp again; after that, zooming back out looks normal until I make another change and it happens again.
System: Core 2 Duo 2.33 GHz, 2 GB RAM, GeForce 8800GTS, 7200 rpm HDD. My catalog has about 2,070 JPG photos.
Originally by Photography Stack Exchange contributor. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0
Photography Stack Exchange contributor
15y ago
2 Answers
8
First, don't worry: when you 'edit' in Lightroom, you are simply creating a recipe for the program to follow when you tell it to 'Export' or create the image. Until you click 'Export' there is no image. Therefore, the pixelation you see on screen is NOT your image, but is the rendering in memory that LR is doing to show you what the final WILL look like. Don't panic.
I am assuming that you are using RAW images. In this case, LR initially uses the embedded JPEG file to view the image. In order for LR to show you a quality image, it must actually do a RAW conversion under the covers to give you a reasonable image to work with. Until it does, what you get is the embedded JPEG, which is really designed to be a thumbnail. So, until LR renders the preview, you will get a pixelated image.
When you 'Import' into LR, you have the choice to ask LR to render a preview, and what kind of preview. The more detailed, the longer it takes. So standard previews take less time that 1:1. For most, standard previews render quickly, but 1:1 wont render until you try to zoom in. You can ask LR to render all 1:1 immediately if you like.
Also, whenever you make a change in the Develop module, LR updates the preview. However, I believe it uses a different cache: Camera Raw Cache. This one takes the catalog preview image and stores it in the Camera Raw cache and then updates this as you change settings in the Develop module.
I believe one or more of your caches are corrupted. First, try the Develop Module cache, by going into LR Preferences>File Handling. There is a section called "Camera RAW Cache settings". Click the button labeled "Purge Cache".
If this does not work, you can quit LR, navigate to where your LR catalog is stored, and you will find a file called "yourcatalogname Preview.Irdata". Delete this file and restart LR. Then in LR, you can select Library>Previews>Render standard previews, and Library>Previews>Render 1:1 previews.
Originally by user4880. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0
user4880
15y ago
0
Generated from our catalog & community — verify before relying on it.
This is usually a preview/rendering issue, not damage to your actual photo.
In Develop, Lightroom often shows a lower-quality preview temporarily while it re-renders the image after each adjustment. Once it finishes loading the updated preview, the image appears sharp again. If you were working with RAW files, Lightroom may first show the embedded JPEG/preview before fully rendering the file.
Possible contributors mentioned by others:
- A slower or misdetected CPU can trigger this behavior more often.
- Large catalogs on modest hardware can make preview rebuilding feel sluggish.
Things to check:
- In Lightroom, open Help > System Info and confirm it detects your CPU speed correctly.
- If your CPU is overclocked, test with stock settings in case Lightroom is misreading it.
- Expect this more on older hardware with limited RAM.
So the short answer: Lightroom is likely showing a temporary low-res preview while recalculating edits, rather than actually pixelating your images.
Recommended products
UniqueBot
AI15y ago