Your storage space is full of them. Files from your first digital camera, 8MP shots that sounded revolutionary at the time but now look bland and limited. You still hold onto them because time was precious, but planting was never an option. Stretch the view and you’ll end up with something that doesn’t work well for the web. Draw hard on the shape and forget. 640 pixels of tears.
Super Resolution changes this. It’s not magic, but it allows you to make bigger prints and spread more of those old photos.
This feature resides in Lightroom Classic’s Detail panel, using machine learning to quadruple your pixel count (and can also be found in Adobe Camera Raw). That 8MP file becomes 32MP. Best of all, it means you can finally make post-order decisions that weren’t possible before. Have you taken a wide boat because you can’t get close? Now you can join. You stayed with them a little because stretching can kill the decision? Boom, it’s fixed.
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How it works
Open your raw file in the Develop module and find the Details section. You will see Super Resolution as a toggle option. Click it, and Lightroom reads the updated version. This process takes a few seconds, a long time for older machines. Unlike the old way of working, this does not create a separate DNG file. The upgrade is applied without damage to your original raw file, saving drive space and keeping your inventory clean. The data is still stored in the list files, but you don’t create a new file.
Once activated, you can turn Super Resolution on and off without rescanning. Your changes remain unchanged regardless of whether the feature is enabled or disabled. This makes it easy to compare the updated version with the original without starting over.
For batch processing, select multiple images in Grid view, then enable Super Resolution from the Detail Panel. Your settings are synced to all selected files.
What really gets better
Super Resolution works best on sharp, clean files. Good glass, low ISO, good focus. Algorithms can’t create data that hasn’t been captured, but it can fit in convincingly when the underlying data is solid. That scene shot from your 8MP DSLR where everything was sharp? An excellent candidate. High ISO concert photo with blurry noise? Save your working time. Maybe in the future we’ll have Super Resolution and Denoise available for one shot, but for now they’re exclusive.
The real test is planting. Take that old file, enable Super Resolution, and crop to 50%. Compare it to what you can get from scratch. The difference can be used versus not used. Even if you get to one quarter of the photo, you’re still going back to the original 8mp, still good for A3 or A2 prints.
Practical truth
Super Resolution will not convert your 2005 files into gallery images. But it can put them to use where they weren’t before. It is especially useful if you are sitting on the archives of early digital cameras that were able to work well but have limited resolution.
The sustainability angle is also important. Instead of constantly chasing new bodies for more megapixels, you’re extracting more value from the files you’ve already shot. That 8MP file you took fifteen years ago suddenly has variables you couldn’t predict.
Try it on a few people. Open the Detail section, toggle Super Resolution, see what’s really there. You might be surprised what will be used.
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