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What is the difference between Minimal previews, Standard previews and 1:1 previews?

Extract from Adobe Lightroom 2 – The Missing FAQ

There are a number of options to choose from when importing your photos, and which you choose will depend on your own browsing habits.

import-previews

Minimal shows the thumbnail preview embedded in the file.  It’s the quickest option initially, but it’s a very small low quality preview (i.e. usually with a black edging and about 160 px along the long edge) so you then have to wait to render previews as you browse.  Minimal previews are not color managed.

Embedded & Sidecar checks the files and their sidecar files for larger previews (approx. 1024 px or larger), giving you the largest ready-built preview it can.  It’s still just a temporary option – Lightroom will build its own previews as soon as it can.

Standard builds a standard-sized preview used for browsing through the photos.  You set the size and quality of these previews in Catalog Settings.  Standard-sized previews are highly recommended – it will greatly speed up browsing performance if Lightroom isn’t having to render previews on the fly.

1:1 previews are full resolution so they take up more space, but if you wish to zoom in on your photos in Library module, it will save Lightroom having to render 1:1 previews on the fly, which would slow your browsing experience.  If you’re concerned about the disc space that they take up, you can set them to delete after a fixed time (in Catalog Settings), or you can discard 1:1 previews on demand by selecting the photos and choosing Library menu > Previews > Discard 1:1 Previews.

You can either choose to render either Standard-Sized or 1:1 previews in the Import dialog or if you wish to render the previews later, select all (or none) of the photos in Grid view and choose Library menu > Previews > Render Standard-Sized Previews or 1:1 Previews.

In early version 1 releases, rendering previews at the same time as importing was much quicker than rendering them later, but this difference is no longer noticeable.

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