Originally Posted by
Manfred M
George - people tend to use Lightroom in two ways.
The first one is to use it as the only editor that they use and to make all the changes there without using any other external editor, like Photoshop. In commercial photography, wedding and portrait photographers often work this way. This is often referred to as "retail photography", where the clients are the general public. As a general statement, Lightroom is very good for global edits, is okay for some area edits and is generally not all that good when doing precise local edits.
The second way is to use it as a raw convertor and to do some limited editing before sending the file over to Photoshop to do things that Lightroom (or Adobe Camera Raw) cannot do. Photoshop is not quite as strong as the other tools in some aspects of doing global edits, is stronger in doing area edits and much stronger in local area edits. This is why a lot of people start of with Lightroom (or Camera Raw) and then pass that work off to Photoshop. People that use the Lightroom / Camera Raw + Photoshop approach tend to be the ones that do higher end work. Work for commercial clients such as publications (print or online), fine art photography, high end portrait photographers, etc. will use this approach.
With the second approach, there is always a debate between how much work to do in Lightroom (or Camera Raw) and how much to do in Photoshop. One school of thought is to do as much as possible in Lightroom or Camera Raw and to just do the things that cannot be accomplished there in Photoshop and the other group will tend to do little more than raw conversion in Lightroom / Camera Raw and do everything else in Photoshop. That is essentially what the comments in this thread are about.