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2015 Elements 13 A brief tutorial for basic photo file processing To begin, click on the Elements 13 icon, click on Photo Editor in the first box that appears. We will not be discussing the Organizer portion of the program. There are a number of things you can do in Elements that are quick and easy ways to improve the appearance of your digital photographs. I m not including a lot of details on why it works, just what to do to make your pictures look better. I am currently using Elements 13.0, but the basics are very similar in earlier versions. WORK WITH DUPLICATES ONLY. After opening the photo you want to work on (File Open), before you start making adjustments, click File Duplicate. Close the original file and work with the duplicate only. When you are finished with the changes, you can save it as a separate file or just close it and you will lose the changes. EXIF file Open photo, then go to File Info. Click on Camera Date tab. This lists information about shutter speeds, aperture, photo size information saved by your camera when the photo was taken. ADJUST LEVELS This is one of the best ways to make a flat photo show some contrast. If a photo has almost all midtones, it can look flat. To adjust the levels, open the photo. From the top bar, click Enhance Adjust lighting Levels. This will show the histogram. If the graph does not extend all the way to both left and right sides, look for the pointer under the left side of the graph and slide it right until it reaches the area where the graph goes up watch the dark areas get darker. Then slide the right pointer to the left until it touches the right edge of the graph. Let the center pointer go where it wants. This will add contrast and depth to your photo. You can also try Enhance Auto Levels or Enhance Auto Contrast to provide a quick fix for many photos, color or B&W. Enhance Auto Contrast works best for me. RESIZE A PHOTO FOR THE WEB. If you are attaching a photo to an email, it is best to reduce the size before sending it. First, it will download quicker. Second, some e-mails services (like mine) have a size limit for attachments. Open your photograph. Click Image Resize Image Size. In the box that comes up, make sure there is a check mark in the box next to Resample Image (lower left corner). Then go up near the top to the box that says Pixel Dimensions. Highlight the larger number (it may be height or width) and enter 1024. The other dimension should change to about 768, depending on the aspect ratio of your camera (can be 4:3, 3:2, 16:9). Now save the image as a jpeg file to a folder where you can access it to send on the web. I save them in a folder labeled web images so I know they have been resized. 1

RESIZE AND CROP A PHOTO FOR PRINTING Often a photograph can be improved by removing unwanted image around the edges. Click Image Crop or click on the crop tool in the tool box. Click and drag to select the area you want to keep. Click the green check mark to complete. Following that, image Resize Image size. Make sure Resample Image is unchecked. Enter a size in width or height the other dimension will change to maintain the proportions. Additional cropping may be required to get an 8 x 10 or a 4 x 6. Then adjust the dpi before printing ( Resample Image needs to be checked for this part). I prefer 225 dpi. A good print can be made with 125 dpi to 300 dpi. Over 300 dpi just wastes ink. Experiment with your printer and your paper. MOVING AROUND THE SCREEN. If you are zooming in to a small area of your photo, it can take some time to zoom in, move around, zoom out, etc. To zoom quickly to an area of your photograph, select the zoom tool (Magnifying Glass), move the cursor to near the area you want to enlarge, hold the mouse button down, then drag the cursor a short distance and release the button. You will zoom in directly to the area you defined with the click and drag. To zoom out, just hold the Alt Key down and click the mouse button as often as needed. Release the Alt Key and click to zoom in again. You can also hold the space bar down and use the hand to move around. RED EYE REMOVAL Select the red-eye tool, zoom in to the eyes. Click on the red pupil and it will change to black. CHANGING TOOL SIZES Many of the tools have sizes that can be changed when you open them up. Let s work with the clone tool for an example. Open the clone tool. In the top bar you will see a size box with the size listed in pixels. You can slide the arrow under the box to increase or decrease the clone tool size. When I slide it, I never get the right size on the first try. Instead, place the cursor on the photo where you can see the size. Then locate the square bracket keys on your keyboard (right of the letter P). One bracket enlarges the cursor, the other makes it smaller. It s a quick way to get the size right the first time. This works with sizing other tools, like the eraser, healing brush, dodge and burn, etc. Caps Lock will mess up the cursor on these tools. Take it off. CLONE TO REMOVE WIRE OR DUST SPECKS - Cloning can remove items from a photo that you do not want. If you take a nice photo, but it has telephone wires running through it, you can remove them using this tool. Click the Clone tool (looks like a rubber stamp). Size it as necessary. Alt/Click on the area you want to replicate, then click to replace/cover the unwanted image. STRAIGHTEN THE HORIZON If you live where a lot of your photos have water in them, a slanted horizon can make an otherwise good photo look bad. To straighten the horizon in your 2

photo, open it, click on the Straighten Tool (looks like a carpenter s level). Place the cursor on one side of the horizon, click and drag to the other side of the horizon. The photo will rotate to make the horizon level. Then you need to click the Crop tool and crop your photo so it is square again. You lose a small portion around the edges of your original photo, but the horizon is now level. A quicker way to get good results is to check the autofill edges box in the tool bar. (HINT) You can use the same tool if you take a vertical shot and it s not straight up and down. No actual horizon is necessary just a line that should be vertical. I rotate the photo 90 degrees, then select a line in the photo that should be straight up and down. Use the straighten tool, click and drag to make the new horizon, crop, then rotate back to the original position. TRANSFORM VERTICAL LINES With wide-angle lenses, the vertical lines are sometimes tilted. To fix this visual problem, select the entire image. Then click Image Transform Skew. Grab a corner and move it until the lines appear vertical. SELECTION TOOLS Sometimes you want to change part of a photo without altering the rest of it. In order to do so, you must select a portion of the photo before making changes. There are several tools that can be used to make a selection. I generally use the lasso tool, the quick selection tool or the magic wand. To make an accurate selection, sometimes a combination of selection tools is needed. LASSO TOOL, QUICK SELECTION TOOL, MAGIC WAND TOOL. TOO GOOD TO CROP If you have ever had a photo that you needed to crop to make a certain size, but you would lose part of the image on the sides that you want to keep, here s something to try. You can compress the photo to keep the information and still get the size you want. Resize the image until the shorter dimension is correct. From the top menu, click Select All. Then from the top menu, click Image Transform Distort. Then put the cursor on the little box at the side of the image and slide it in as far as you need to get the correct measurement. The photo will compress. If you only move it a little, the compaction of the image is not noticeable and you still have all parts of your image showing. Click the green check mark to complete the change. Then crop to eliminate the blank areas. This can also be used to slightly enlarge a photo along one dimension. OUTLINE OR FRAME A PHOTO Open the photo, then go to the top menu. Click Select All. Back to the top, Click Edit Stroke. In the top box that opens, select the width of the line you want around the photo. Start with 5 pixels, you can change it if it s wrong. In the next box down, select the color you want for the outline. Black is a good starting point. Location should be inside, mode should be normal, opacity 100%. Click OK and your photo should have a black outline. 3

Variations if you do the process above twice, you can get a double outline. Do the first outline in Black, 10 pixels wide. When you are finished, select all again and do another color (like red) but set the size to 5 pixels this time. HOW TO MAKE A PANORAMIC PICTURE First, take two or more photos that overlap by 25-30%. The exact amount is not critical, but they must overlap. USE A TRIPOD to improve results. Try to keep the horizon level in all pictures. Do not use a polarizer. Set the camera on manual (M on the wheel on top) so all the photos get the same exposure. To begin, click Enhance Photomerge Photomerge Panorama. Browse to find the photos you want to combine. Select how they are to be combined I like Cylindrical or Reposition. Click OK in the photomerge box and let it process the photos. It should join them into a single panoramic photo if you took the originals as mentioned above. After the panoramic is made, you will have to process it in Elements. Crop it to get rid of areas where the photomerge was not exactly even, or try the autofill option when it pops up. Then click Layer Flatten Image to save it without multiple layers. HDR PHOTOS High Dynamic Range is a method of combining several photos with different exposures to eliminate over and under exposed areas. Start with 3-5 photos taken from a tripod. Expose one as the light meter suggests. Take a second photo two stops overexposed and a third photo two stops underexposed. Open all photos in Elements 13. Click Enhance Photomerge Exposure. Click Open All. (Wait while the photos are combined). After the final alignment is complete, adjust the sliders for shadow and highlight exposure as needed. When you have the photo you want, click Done button in the lower right. This will blend your original photos to a single photo, using only the properly exposed portions of each photo. HOW TO MAKE A COLLAGE Click Create tab, upper right of screen. Click Photo collage and follow instructions. You can allow the program to place the photos, or click and drag them yourself. BLACK & WHITE PHOTOS There are several methods available in Elements. The simplest is to open the color photo, then click Enhance Adjust Color Adjust Hue and Saturation. Slide the Saturation bar all the way to the left and the photo becomes black and white. Following this, it helps to do the Levels adjustment (slide in the ends) as mentioned earlier. Another way to make B&W gives you more control. Open the color photo, then click Enhance Convert to Black and White. You can then play with the buttons and sliders that show up until you get the look you like. BLACK & WHITE WITH A LITTLE COLOR It is simple to convert a color photo to B&W and leave a little color in it. Select the portion you want to leave as color. Invert the selection. Convert to B&W as above. 4

MOVE TOOL - Open two photos. Click Layout (at bottom), then All Grid to view both on screen at the same time. With the Quick Select tool, select the portion to be moved. Click on Move Tool, then click and drag to the other photo. Final size the moved portion. Click select Flatten Image. You can also use this tool to improve your skies. Open both photos. Drag the photo with a drab sky over your good sky. Select the drab sky, then delete. Photo should be flattened before saving. TEXT TOOL - Select Text Tool on tool bar. Choose text size. Choose Font. Decide on Centered, left or right text. Try adding drop shadows under FX. SPONGE TO SATURATE or desaturate GUIDED CHANGES. Follow the instructions with Photo Play Out of Bounds. FILTERS This is a fun part of Elements. Just open your photograph, click Filters and move on to any part of the menu. I play with lots of filters and get some neat effects. If you want a good starting point, try out the Artistic filters. There are lots of sliders to change the effects you get. Test a lot of them Pixels are cheap, you have nothing to lose. If you don t like the results, click Reset and try something else. 5