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Chapter 1
IN THIS CHAPTER
Opening the Home screen
Starting the Photo Editor
Opening, editing, sharing, and saving a photo
Using Undo History
Finding help
Saving your files
Image editing is incredibly fun, especially with a tool like Photoshop Elements, which enables you to modify, combine, and even draw your own images to your imagination's content. To get the most out of Elements, you need to understand some basic technical concepts, but like most people, you probably want to jump in, play around, and basically just get started right away.
You're in luck: In Quick mode, Elements helps you make basic edits to your photos, like revealing your child's face darkened by a baseball cap's shadow or cropping out the gigantic trash can on the left edge of your otherwise perfect landscape shot. In this chapter, we help you jump-start your image-editing skills by guiding you through Quick mode and how to share photos online, retrace your steps, save your edits, and more.
After installing Elements, launch the Elements application, and you arrive at the Home screen (or Hub, as Adobe calls it), shown in Figure 1-1.
FIGURE 1-1: The Photoshop Elements Home screen.
From the Home screen, you have the following options:
Photoshop Elements has two separate components. There is the Organizer, which is where you manage photos. It's full of tools for tagging, rating, sorting, and finding your images. (Part 2 of this book helps you start using the Organizer.) The second component is the Photo Editor, which is where you correct photos for brightness and color, add effects, repair images, and so on. is where you correct photos for brightness and color, add effects, repair images, and so on.
In this chapter, you work in the Photo Editor to make basic edits to a photo. Here's how to start Elements and open the Photo Editor:
Click the Photo Editor button shown in the Home screen (refer to Figure 1-1).
The Photo Editor workspace loads and appears, as shown in Figure 1-2. By default, you see the Quick tab selected at the top of the Photo Editor workspace, which means you're in Quick mode (or right where you want to be for the purposes of this chapter). Quick mode offers a limited number of tools for adjusting brightness, contrast, color, and sharpness.
FIGURE 1-2: The default Photo Editor workspace with the Quick tab selected.
On the right side of the workspace, you see the Adjustments panel docked in an area dubbed the Panel Bin. When in any one of the three editing modes (Quick, Guided, Expert), you find different panels, always on the right side of the window. On the left side of the workspace, you see a Tools panel. Interacting with the items in the Panel Bin and using tools in the Tools panel provide you with an enormous number of options for editing, improving, and stylizing your pictures.
For beginning users, the Quick mode in the Photo Editor is both powerful and easy to use. Follow these steps to make some simple changes to an image:
Choose File???Open or click the Open button at the top left of the Photo Editor.
If Elements is your default editing application, you can also double-click your photo file in Windows Explorer or the Mac Finder, and the file opens in Elements.
Make edits to your photo.
Here's an introduction to two simple edits you can make in Quick mode:
Apply a Smart Fix: Click Smart Fix in the Panel Bin to see the options. To begin with, click Auto at the bottom of the Smart Fix panel. At the top left of the window, you find options for viewing by opening the drop-down menu. Choose After Only or choose Before & After (Horizontal or Vertical) to see before and after views.
Several items are listed in the Panel Bin below the Smart Fix option. Click an item to expand it, and move the sliders or click the thumbnail images to tweak the overall brightness, contrast, and color. In many cases, there isn't a right or wrong adjustment. Play with the options to bring it close to your overall vision for the picture. For a more in-depth look at correcting photos in Quick mode, flip to Chapter 10.
Each of the Quick Fix options provides you with thumbnail previews showing you the result of a given edit. For a quick preview of an editing task, mouse over a Smart Fix thumbnail to see what the edit will look like when it is applied.
When making any one of a huge number of edits to your pictures, you often see icons on top of the image, similar to what's shown in Figure 1-4. The green check mark accepts the edit you're making at the time the icons appear. The circle with a diagonal line is the Cancel button. Click this button when you don't want to apply the recent edit.
At the bottom of the Editor window, you see some hints that Elements gives you for crop suggestions. Click one of the options to employ the respective crop.
Choose File???Save As and, in the Save As dialog box that opens, provide a new name for the photo. Click Save.
Note: When you use Save As and give your image a new name, you don't destroy your original image. You save a copy of the original with the new edits applied. For more on saving files, see the section "Saving Files with Purpose," later in this chapter.
FIGURE 1-3: The before and after views in Quick mode.
FIGURE 1-4: The Crop tool sized on a photo.
After you edit your photo, you can print the photo to share with family and friends or post the photo on a social network site.
In earlier versions of Elements, you could upload directly from within Facebook. Then Adobe removed the link to Facebook in the last few releases. In Photoshop Elements 2023, Elements returns to a marriage with Facebook. In this release, Adobe introduces a new feature called Elements Web. If you take a look at the Share menu, you see Facebook listed there. Rather than go through all the features you see added to Elements Web here in this chapter, we devoted a brand new chapter to covering the new Elements Web features. Take a look at Chapter 18 to learn about all those new features.
For now, take a look at how you might edit a photo and upload it to your Facebook account without using any links from within Elements. Here's how to do it:
Prepare the photo you want to upload to Facebook.
Typically, digital cameras take photos sized very large - too large for an image that your friends and family will want to download quickly...
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