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Full-color, step-by-step instruction for using the new Photoshop Elements 11 Covering the most important features of Photoshop Elements 11, this book is packed with step-by-step instructions illustrated with full-color screen shots that clearly shows you how to do tasks, instead of resorting to lengthy explanations. Even better, the book includes an associated website with all the images in the book available for download, so you can get hands-on practice as you go. With this book, veteran author Mike Wooldridge gets up to speed on the latest and best that Photoshop Elements 10 has to offer. * Walks you through the improved organizational and navigational tools that will help you categorize images * Details the enhanced tool for converting color images to B&W as well as the Flash-based web gallery templates to display images * Covers importing photos from digital cameras and scanners, retouching and repairing damaged photos, enhancing digital images, perfecting group shots with Photomerge, and editing images for posting on the web * Helps you utilize the sharpness interface to correct blurry images as well as the Curves tool to adjust contract and brightness Teach Yourself VISUALLY Photoshop Elements 11 makes learning the new Photoshop Elements elementary!
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Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Getting Started
Introducing Photoshop Elements 11
Understanding Digital Images
Start Photoshop Elements
Explore the Editor Workspace
Tour the Organizer Workspace
Switch Between the Organizer and the Editor
Introducing the Photoshop Elements Tools
Switch Editor Modes
Work with Tools
Work with Panels
Set Program Preferences
View Rulers and Guides
Chapter 2: Importing and Opening Digital Images
Get Photos for Your Projects
Import Photos from a Digital Camera or Card Reader
Import Photos from a Scanner
Import Photos from a Folder
Watch a Folder for New Images
Open a Photo
Create a Blank Image
Save a Photo
Duplicate a Photo
Close a Photo
Chapter 3: Organizing Your Photos
Introducing the Organizer
Open the Organizer
Create a Catalog
View Photos in the Media Browser
View Photos in Full Screen
Display a Slide Show in Full Screen
View Photo Information
Add a Caption
Work with Albums
Find Photos
Rate Photos
View Versions of a Photo
Remove a Photo from the Organizer
Chapter 4: Using Advanced Organizing Tools
Perform an Advanced Search
Work with Keyword Tags
Define People in Photos
Define Places
View Places
Define Events
Using Smart Events
Apply an Instant Fix
Stack Photos
Find by Visual Similarity
Chapter 5: Applying Basic Image Edits
Manage Open Images
Magnify with the Zoom Tool
Adjust the Image View
Change the On-Screen Image Size
Change the Image Print Size
Change the Image Resolution
Change the Image Canvas Size
Work in Quick Edit Mode
Crop an Image
Rotate an Image
Undo Changes to an Image
Revert an Image
Chapter 6: Making Selections
Select an Area with the Marquee
Select an Area with the Lasso
Select an Area with the Magic Wand
Select an Area with the Quick Selection Tool
Select an Area with the Selection Brush
Save and Load a Selection
Invert a Selection
Deselect a Selection
Chapter 7: Manipulating Selections
Add to or Subtract from a Selection
Move a Selection
Duplicate a Selection
Delete a Selection
Rotate a Selection
Scale a Selection
Skew or Distort a Selection
Refine the Edge of a Selection
Feather the Border of a Selection
Chapter 8: Using Layers
Introducing Layers
Create and Add to a Layer
Hide a Layer
Move a Layer
Duplicate a Layer
Delete a Layer
Reorder Layers
Change the Opacity of a Layer
Link Layers
Merge Layers
Rename a Layer
Create a Fill Layer
Create an Adjustment Layer
Blend Layers
Add a Layer Mask
Edit a Layer Mask
Chapter 9: Enhancing and Retouching Photos
Retouch with Guided Edit
Quick Fix a Photo
Remove Red Eye
Retouch with the Clone Stamp Tool
Remove a Spot
Sharpen an Image
Extract an Object from a Background
Merge Group Shots
Clean Up a Scene
Recompose a Photo
Fix Keystone Distortion
Improve a Portrait
Chapter 10: Improving Lighting and Exposure
Enhance Lighting with Guided Edit
Adjust Levels
Adjust Shadows and Highlights
Change Brightness and Contrast
Lighten Areas with the Dodge Tool
Darken Areas with the Burn Tool
Add a Spotlight
Fix Exposure
Using the Blur and Sharpen Tools
Chapter 11: Enhancing Colors
Enhance Colors with Guided Edit
Adjust Skin Color
Adjust Color with the Sponge Tool
Correct Color with Color Variations
Replace a Color
Turn a Color Photo into Black and White
Add Color to a Black-and-White Photo
Adjust Colors by Using Color Curves
Chapter 12: Painting and Drawing on Photos
Set the Foreground and Background Colors
Add Color with the Brush Tool
Change Brush Styles
Add Color with the Paint Bucket Tool
Using a Brush to Replace a Color
Adjust Colors with the Smart Brush
Draw a Shape
Draw a Line
Apply the Eraser
Apply a Gradient
Add Content from the Graphics Panel
Chapter 13: Applying Filters
Blur an Image
Distort an Image
Turn an Image into a Painting
Turn an Image into a Sketch
Add Noise to an Image
Pixelate an Image
Emboss an Image
Apply Multiple Filters
Chapter 14: Adding Text Elements
Add Text
Change the Formatting of Text
Change the Color of Text
Create Warped Text
Create Beveled Text
Add a Shadow to Text
Add an Outline to Text
Add Text Along a Selection
Chapter 15: Applying Styles and Effects
Frame a Photo with a Drop Shadow
Add a Drop Shadow to a Layer
Create a Vintage Photo
Add a Fancy Background
Add an Outer Glow to a Layer
Add a Fancy Covering to a Layer
Add a Watermark
Apply a Photomerge Style
Apply a Camera Effect
Apply an Effect with an Action
Chapter 16: Presenting Photos Creatively
Create a Slide Show
Create a Photo Book
Create a Photo Collage
Create a Photo Panorama
Chapter 17: Saving and Sharing Your Work
Save a Photo for the Web
Convert File Types
E-Mail Images with Photo Mail
Print Photos
Share Photos on Facebook
Export Photos
Back Up Photos
Teach Yourself VISUALLY™ Photoshop® Elements 11
Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc.10475 Crosspoint BoulevardIndianapolis, IN 46256
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Published simultaneously in Canada
Copyright © 2013 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Indianapolis, Indiana
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Wiley, the Wiley logo, Visual, the Visual logo, Teach Yourself VISUALLY, Read Less - Learn More and related trade dress are trademarks or registered trademarks of John Wiley & Sons, Inc. and/or its affiliates. Adobe and Photoshop are registered trademarks of Adobe Systems, Inc. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. is not associated with any product or vendor mentioned in this book.
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Credits
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About the Authors
Mike Wooldridge is a writer and web developer based in the San Francisco Bay Area. He has authored more than 30 books for the Visual series. For more information about him and his books, visit www.wooldridge.net.
Brianna Stuart is a writer, editor, and busy mom based in the Seattle area. She is also the author of Creating Web Pages Simplified, 2nd Edition and Teach Yourself VISUALLY Photoshop Elements 10.
Authors’ Acknowledgments
Mike and Brianna thank Sarah Hellert, Scott Tullis, Dennis Cohen, and everyone else at Wiley for their help with this book. Mike dedicates this book to his wife, who provided many of the photos in the examples, and his son, who loves posting photos to Instagram. Brianna dedicates this book to her ever-photogenic children. She thanks them for their willingness to help provide some of the examples in this book, and for their newfound understanding of the phrase, “Mama will be done writing in five minutes,” even if they answer her with yet another request for the Tickle Monster.
How to Use This Book
Who This Book Is For
This book is for the reader who has never used this particular technology or software application. It is also for readers who want to expand their knowledge.
The Conventions in This Book
Steps
This book uses a step-by-step format to guide you easily through each task. Numbered steps are actions you must do; bulleted steps clarify a point, step, or optional feature; and indented steps give you the result.
Notes
Notes give additional information — special conditions that may occur during an operation, a situation that you want to avoid, or a cross-reference to a related area of the book.
Icons and Buttons
Icons and buttons show you exactly what you need to click to perform a step.
Tips
Tips offer additional information, including warnings and shortcuts.
Bold
Bold type shows command names or options that you must click or text or numbers you must type.
Italics
Italic type introduces and defines a new term.
Chapter 1: Getting Started
Are you interested in working with digital images on your computer? This chapter introduces you to Adobe Photoshop Elements 11, a popular software application for editing and creating digital images. Photoshop Elements also enables you to organize your collection of digital images so you can easily find what you are looking for.
Introducing Photoshop Elements 11
Understanding Digital Images
Start Photoshop Elements
Explore the Editor Workspace
Tour the Organizer Workspace
Switch Between the Organizer and the Editor
Introducing the Photoshop Elements Tools
Switch Editor Modes
Work with Tools
Work with Panels
Set Program Preferences
View Rulers and Guides
Introducing Photoshop Elements 11
Photoshop Elements is a popular photo-editing program you can use to modify, optimize, and organize digital images. You can use the program’s Editor to make imperfect snapshots clearer and more colorful as well as retouch and restore older photos. With layers, you can isolate objects in your images and apply special effects just to those objects or combine multiple images into a collage. You can also use the program’s Organizer to group your photos into albums, assign descriptive keyword tags, discover visually similar images, create slide shows, and more. When you are done with your images, you can use Photoshop Elements to save them for sharing on the web or print them out.
Manipulate Photos
As its name suggests, Photoshop Elements excels at enabling you to edit elements in your digital photographs. The program includes numerous image-editing tools and commands you can apply to manipulate the look of your photos. Whether you import photos from a digital camera or a scanner, you can apply a wide variety of editing techniques to your images, from subtle adjustments in color to elaborate filters that make your snapshots look like paintings. See Chapter 7 for more on manipulating selected parts of your photos. See Chapter 12 for more on painting and drawing, and see Chapter 13 for more on using filters.
Retouch and Repair
You can use Photoshop Elements to edit new photos to make them look their best as well as retouch and repair older photos that suffer from aging problems. For example, you can restore a faded photo by using saturation controls to make it more vibrant, or you can use the Clone Stamp tool to repair a tear or stain. You can also use the program’s exposure commands to fix lighting problems as well as edit out unwanted objects with the Healing Brush. See Chapter 9 for more on retouching your photos.
Add Decoration
The painting and drawing tools in Photoshop Elements make the program a formidable illustration tool as well as a photo editor. You can apply colors or patterns to your images with a variety of brush styles. See Chapter 12 to discover how to paint and draw on your photos. In addition, you can use the application’s typographic tools to integrate stylized letters and words into your images. See Chapter 14 for more on adding text elements.
Create a Digital Collage
You can combine parts of different images in Photoshop Elements to create a collage. Your compositions can include photos, scanned art, text, and anything else you can save on your computer as a digital image. By placing elements on separate layers, you can move, transform, and customize them independently of one another. See Chapter 8 for more on layers. You can also merge several side-by-side scenes into a seamless panorama, which is covered in Chapter 16.
Organize and Catalog
As you bring photos into Photoshop Elements, the program keeps track of them in the Organizer. In the Organizer, you can place groups of photos into theme-specific albums, tag your photos with keywords, and search for specific photos based on a variety of criteria. You can also define the people who are in your photos, the places where photos were taken, and the events during which they were taken. See Chapters 3 and 4 for more on the Organizer.
Put Your Photos to Work
After you edit your photographs, you can use them in a variety of ways. Photoshop Elements enables you to print your images, save them for the web, or bring them together in a slide show. You can share your photos on Facebook directly from the Organizer. You can also create photo books, calendars, and other projects. For more on creating and printing your photo projects, see Chapters 16 and 17.
Understanding Digital Images
To work with photos in Photoshop Elements, you must first have them in a digital format. When a computer saves a photographic file, it turns the image content into lots of tiny squares called pixels. Digital cameras capture their photos as files made up of pixels. Editing a digital image is mostly about recoloring and rearranging pixels, at least on a small scale. Using Photoshop Elements can be a little easier when you remember this. This section introduces you to some important basics about how computers store images in digital form.
Acquire Photos
You can acquire photographic images to use in Photoshop Elements from a number of sources. You can download photos to Photoshop Elements from a digital camera, memory card, or photo CD. You can scan photographs, slides, or artwork and then import the images directly into the program. You can also bring in photos that you have downloaded from the web. For more on importing photos, see Chapter 2.
Understanding Pixels
Digital images that you download from a camera consist ofpixels, each composed of a single color. Photoshop Elements works its magic by rearranging and recoloring these pixels. You can edit specific pixels or groups of pixels by selecting the area of the photo you want to edit. If you zoom in close, you can see the pixels that make up your image. Chapter 5 covers the Zoom tool.
Bitmap Images
Images composed of pixels are known as bitmap images or raster images. The pixels are arranged in a rectangular grid, and each pixel includes information about its color and position. Most of the time when you are working in Photoshop Elements, you are working with bitmap content.
Vector Graphics
The other common way of displaying pictures on your computer is with vector graphics. Vector graphics encode image information by using mathematical equations instead of pixels. Unlike raster images, vector graphics can change size without a loss of quality. When you add shapes or text to your photos in Photoshop Elements, you are working with vector graphics.
Supported File Formats
Photoshop Elements supports a variety of file types you can both import and export. Popular file formats include BMP, PICT, TIFF, EPS, JPEG, GIF, PDF, PNG, and PSD, which stands for Photoshop Document. Files that you save in the PSD, TIFF, and PDF formats can include layers and other information that cannot be saved with the other formats.
For images published on the Internet, JPEG, GIF, and PNG are the most common formats.
File Size
An important way file formats differ from one another is the amount of storage they take up on your computer. File formats such as PSD and TIFF tend to take up more space because they faithfully save all the information that your camera or other device originally captured. Those formats can also include multiple layers. JPEG, GIF, and PNG files, on the other hand, are built to be sent over the Internet and usually sacrifice some quality for the sake of compactness.
Start Photoshop Elements
After you install Photoshop Elements, you can start it to begin creating and editing digital images. Common ways of obtaining and installing the program include from a DVD or from downloading it from Adobe over the Internet. On a PC, you can access Photoshop Elements as you do other programs — through the Start menu. On a Mac, you can access it through the Finder in the Applications folder or through Launchpad.
Start Photoshop Elements
Click Start.
Type Elements in the search box.
Windows displays a list of search results.
Click Adobe Photoshop Elements 11.
The Photoshop Elements welcome screen opens.
The welcome screen enables you to access the two different workspaces in Photoshop Elements.
Click Photo Editor.
The Photoshop Elements Editor opens.
A You can click Organizer to open the Organizer.
B You can click to access the startup settings.
Explore the Editor Workspace
In the Photoshop Elements Editor, you can use a combination of tools, menu commands, and panel-based features to open and edit your digital photos. You can switch between editing modes to access different tool and panel arrangements. The main Editor pane displays the photos that you are currently modifying. To open the Editor, click Photo Editor on the welcome screen.
A Image Window
Displays each photo you open in Photoshop Elements
B Image Tabs
Clickable tabs for switching between open images in the Editor
C Organizer Button
Clickable button for switching to the Organizer interface, where you can catalog your photos
D Mode Buttons
Clickable buttons for switching between editor modes, each having a different arrangement of tools and panels (Expert mode is shown)
E Panel Bin
A storage area for panels, which are the resizable windows that hold related commands, settings, and other information
F Photo Bin
Enables you to open and work with multiple photos
G Task Bar
Contains buttons for showing and hiding panels and executing common commands
H Tools
Clickable icons that represent the editing tools in Photoshop Elements
I Open Button
Clickable button for opening photos to start editing
J Create Button
Clickable button for accessing a menu of photo-related projects
Tour the Organizer Workspace
In the Photoshop Elements Organizer, you can catalog, view, and sort your growing library of digital photos. The main Organizer pane, called the Media Browser, shows miniature versions of the photos in your catalog. To open the Organizer, click Organizer on the welcome screen.
A Media Browser
Displays miniature versions, or thumbnails, of the photos and other media in your catalog
B Photo Details
Shows ratings information and the categories associated with each photo
C Editor Button
Clickable button for switching to the Editor interface, where you can edit your photos
D View Buttons
Clickable buttons for switching to different views in the Organizer
E Panel Bin
A storage area for panels, which are the resizable windows that hold related commands, settings, and other information
F Import Button
Clickable button for importing photos from a camera, folder, or other location to start organizing
G Task Bar
Contains buttons for showing and hiding panels, creating categories, and executing common commands
H Share Button
Clickable button for sharing via social networks, e-mail, and more
Switch Between the Organizer and the Editor
Photoshop Elements has two main workspaces: the Organizer and the Editor. The Organizer lets you browse, sort, share, and categorize photos in your collection, and the Editor enables you to modify, combine, and optimize your photos. You can easily switch between the two environments.
You can use the Organizer to review your photos to find images for your projects. After you select your photos in the Organizer, you can open the Editor to adjust the colors, lighting, and other aspects of the photos, and then switch back to the Organizer to choose more photos to edit.
Switch Between the Organizer and the Editor
Start Photoshop Elements in the Organizer view.
Note: See the section “Start Photoshop Elements” for more on starting the program.
You can browse and sort your photos in the Organizer.
Note: For more about using the Organizer, see Chapters 3 and 4.
Click a photo to select it.
Click the Editor button.
The photo opens in the Editor. If the Editor is not already running, it may take a few moments to launch.
A The Editor opens in whatever mode you last used.
B You can click the Organizer button to return to the Organizer.
Introducing the Photoshop Elements Tools
In the Editor, Photoshop Elements offers a variety of specialized tools that enable you to manipulate your image. You can select tools by clicking icons on the left side of the workspace or by typing a keyboard shortcut key. Keyboard shortcut keys are shown in parentheses. Each Editor mode features a different set of tools. Expert mode, which has the most tools available, is shown here.
A Zoom (Z)
Zooms your view of an image in or out
B Hand (H)
Moves the image to reveal off-screen portions of the image
C Move (V)
Moves selected areas of an image
D Marquee (M)
Defines an area of an image by drawing a box or ellipse around the area you want to edit
E Lasso (L)
Selects pixels by drawing a free-form shape around the area you want to edit
F Quick Selection (A)
Selects areas of an image based on color similarity and edges
G Red-Eye Removal (Y)
Corrects red-eye problems
H Spot-Healing Brush (J)
Repairs imperfections by copying nearby pixels
I Smart Brush (F)
Simultaneously selects and applies a wide variety of different effects
J Clone Stamp (S)
Paints pixels from one part of an image to another part
K Blur (R)
Blurs selected portions of your image
L Sponge (O)
Increases or decreases color saturation or intensity
A Brush (B)
Paints strokes of color
B Eraser (E)
Erases pixels by replacing them with background color or making them transparent layers
C Paint Bucket (K)
Fills a selected area with a single color
D Gradient (G)
Fills areas with blended color effects
E Eyedropper (I)
Samples color from an area of an image
F Custom Shape (U)
Draws predefined shapes
G Type (T)
Adds text to an image
H Pencil (N)
Draws hard-edged lines of color
I Crop (C)
Trims or expands an image to improve composition
J Recompose (W)
Intelligently change the size of a photo while keeping elements intact
K Cookie Cutter (Q)
Masks an image so only the image under the selected shape is available
L Straighten (P)
Straightens out a crooked image or changes the orientation of an image
M Foreground and Background Color
Sets foreground and background colors to use with tools
N Tool Options Panel
Displays settings to customize the selected tool
Switch Editor Modes
The Photoshop Elements Editor has three modes: Quick Edit, Guided Edit, and Expert Edit. You can switch modes based on the tools you need and the workflow you are comfortable with.
Quick Edit offers access to commonly used tools and optimization commands. It is perfect for the beginner or someone who wants to fix photos quickly. Guided Edit features step-by-step instructions paired with tools for fixing photos and adding special effects. Expert Edit gives you access to most of the program’s tools and the more complex commands.
Switch Editor Modes
Open a photo in the Editor.