Schweitzer Fachinformationen
Wenn es um professionelles Wissen geht, ist Schweitzer Fachinformationen wegweisend. Kunden aus Recht und Beratung sowie Unternehmen, öffentliche Verwaltungen und Bibliotheken erhalten komplette Lösungen zum Beschaffen, Verwalten und Nutzen von digitalen und gedruckten Medien.
Ignite your creativity with Photoshop Elements
Introducing the latest edition of Photoshop Elements 2025 For Dummies, updated for the newest version of Adobe's affordable and beginner-friendly photo editing software. With this comprehensive guide at your fingertips, you'll unlock the potential of Elements, turning ordinary photos into extraordinary images. Packed with all the essential photo editing tools, this software empowers you to brush up snapshots, create like-worthy social media posts, and create artistic masterpieces. In this easy-to-understand guide, you'll find instructions on using editing tools, working with layers, making one-click fixes, brightening colors, adding filters, and beyond.
Perfect for non-professional photographers and graphic designers new to Elements or looking for a refresh, this best-selling Dummies guide is your essential companion for getting started with Elements and learning insider tips to create images that "pop."
Barbara Obermeier is the principal of Obermeier Design and the Chair of the Visual Arts Department at California Lutheran University. Ted Padova is semiretired and devotes his time to photography and consulting.
Part 1: Getting Started with Photoshop Elements 2025 5
CHAPTER 1: Exploring the Photo Editor 7
CHAPTER 2: Getting Familiar with the Organizer 33
CHAPTER 3: Organizing Your Pictures 47
CHAPTER 4: Viewing and Finding Your Images 57
Part 2: Selecting and Correcting Photos 71
CHAPTER 5: Editing Camera Raw Images 73
CHAPTER 6: Making and Modifying Selections 97
CHAPTER 7: Working with Layers 129
CHAPTER 8: Simple Image Makeovers 145
CHAPTER 9: Correcting Contrast, Color, and Clarity 181
Part 3: Exploring Your Inner Artist 223
CHAPTER 10: Playing with Filters, Effects, Styles, and More 225
CHAPTER 11: Drawing, Painting, and Typing 255
Part 4: Printing, Creating, and Sharing 287
CHAPTER 12: Getting It on Paper 289
CHAPTER 13: Sharing Your Work 297
CHAPTER 14: Making Creations 303
Part 5: The Part of Tens 315
CHAPTER 15: The Ten Best Guided Edits 317
CHAPTER 16: Ten (or So) More Project Ideas 335
Index 341
Chapter 1
IN THIS CHAPTER
Examining the Editor workspace
Using the Photo Bin
Using Creative Effects
Launching Preferences
Customizing the presets
Photoshop Elements has two workspaces: the Organizer, which we discuss in Chapter 2, and the Photo Editor, introduced in this chapter. You manage and arrange your photos in the Organizer, and you edit photos in the Photo Editor.
In this chapter, you look at the Photo Editor, where you can refine your photo-editing skills. You discover the Photo Editor's workspace in depth as well as how to access the Photo Editor's three editing modes: Quick, Guided, and Advanced. You access these three workspaces by clicking the tabs above the image window.
Before you begin editing photos, you'll find it helpful to look over the Photo Editor and figure out how to move around the workspace. When the Photo Editor is in Advanced mode, you find the following (as labeled in Figure 1-1):
Open menu: When you have several files open in the Photo Editor, the Open menu is one way to switch among these files. To use this menu, click the down-pointing arrow adjacent to the Open button and, from the drop-down list, choose the image you want to move to the foreground. Note: The Open menu also offers you an option to create a new, blank file.
In Figure 1-1, several files are open, as indicated by the tabs at the top of the image window. You can also place an open file in the foreground in the image window in these other ways:
File tabs: Multiple photos opened in the Photo Editor appear in different tabs at the top of the window by default.
In technical-speak, this is a docked position, meaning that the photos are docked in the image window. You can click a tab and drag it down to undock the photo. To undock photos, you must change a preference setting in the General Preferences by checking Allow Floating Windows in Advanced mode. (See "Controlling the Editing Environment," later in this chapter, for more on changing preferences.) Doing so makes the photo appear as a floating window. You might want to float windows when copying and pasting image data between two or more photos. You can also view all open files in a floating window without choosing All Floating from the Layout pop-up menu (item M). To use this menu command, you must first enable the Preferences to allow floating windows.
Photo Bin/Tool Options: Figure 1-1 shows the Photo Bin open. Click the Tool Options button, and a set of Tool Options replaces the Photo Bin. You can also open the Tool Options by clicking a tool in the Tools panel.
Tool Options enable you to specify how the selected tool works. For example, the Tool Options for the Brush tool, as shown in Figure 1-2, enable you to select from a few different brush styles, set the size of your brush, and much more. (You discover how the specific tools work in the relevant chapters later in this book. For example, you find out how the Brush tool works in Chapter 11, which covers drawing, painting, and typing.)
Each tool in the Tools panel supports various tool options. To return to the Photo Bin, click the Photo Bin button at the bottom left of the window.
The description of the Photo Editor workspace is brief in this chapter. Most of the options you have for using tools, panels, and menu commands are discussed in later chapters. For now, try to get a feel for what the Photo Editor provides and how to move among many of the Photo Editor features.
Photo by Ted Padova
FIGURE 1-1: The Photo Editor workspace.
FIGURE 1-2: Tool Options provide more editing features for tools selected in the Tools panel.
Not surprisingly, the image window's tools and features are most useful when an image is open in the window. To open an image in the image window, shown in Figure 1-3, follow these steps:
Choose File ? Open.
The standard Open dialog box appears; it works like any ordinary Open dialog box that you find in other applications.
You can always click one or more photos in the Organizer and click the Editor button to open the selected photos in the Photo Editor.
Navigate your hard drive (by using methods you know to open folders) and then select a picture.
If you haven't yet downloaded digital camera images or acquired scanned photos and want an image to experiment with, you can use a sample image. Both your operating system and Photoshop Elements typically provide sample images:
Dateiformat: ePUBKopierschutz: Adobe-DRM (Digital Rights Management)
Systemvoraussetzungen:
Das Dateiformat ePUB ist sehr gut für Romane und Sachbücher geeignet – also für „fließenden” Text ohne komplexes Layout. Bei E-Readern oder Smartphones passt sich der Zeilen- und Seitenumbruch automatisch den kleinen Displays an. Mit Adobe-DRM wird hier ein „harter” Kopierschutz verwendet. Wenn die notwendigen Voraussetzungen nicht vorliegen, können Sie das E-Book leider nicht öffnen. Daher müssen Sie bereits vor dem Download Ihre Lese-Hardware vorbereiten.Bitte beachten Sie: Wir empfehlen Ihnen unbedingt nach Installation der Lese-Software diese mit Ihrer persönlichen Adobe-ID zu autorisieren!
Weitere Informationen finden Sie in unserer E-Book Hilfe.