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Introduction When Photoshop Elements was first released back in 2001, it became a runaway success. It’s easy to see why: Elements gives people all the tools they need to get the very best from their photographs. It lets you take a ho-hum shot and give it some wow.
If you run a graphics studio or a large professional photography business, then you need the full version of Photoshop. But for most people who aren’t creating images for commercial printing, Elements offers a very useful toolkit at an appealing price. Even if you already have a photo-management program like Adobe’s Lightroom or Apple’s Aperture, you’ll find that Elements offers tools for certain tasks that you can’t perform with those programs. Since Adobe introduced their new Creative Cloud monthly subscription plan for Photoshop, a lot of people are looking for an alternative that doesn’t require paying every month forever.
If you’re one of them, Elements may be a good fit for you, but you need to be aware that a lot of features and controls are pretty well hidden in Elements. It’s a capable, mid-level image-editing program, but you need to know where to find things, since Elements is laid out quite differently from Photoshop and some features have different names. (For instance, if you’ve used Photoshop, what you know as Smart Sharpening is called Adjust Sharpness in Elements.) Happily, you have this book to guide you. Why Photoshop Elements? Adobe Photoshop is the granddaddy of all image-editing programs. It’s the Big Cheese, the industry standard against which everything else is measured. Every photo you’ve seen in a book or magazine in the past 15 years or so has almost certainly passed through Photoshop on its way to being printed.
You just can’t buy anything that gives you more control over pictures than Photoshop does. But Photoshop has some big drawbacks: It’s darned hard to learn, it’s horribly expensive (and now a lot of people are turned off by Adobe’s new subscription-only Creative Cloud plan), and many of its features are just plain overkill if you don’t work on pictures for a living.
For several years, Adobe tried to find a way to cram many of Photoshop’s marvelous powers into a package that normal people could use. Finding the right formula was a slow process. First came PhotoDeluxe, a program that was lots of fun but came up short when you wanted to fine-tune how the program worked. Adobe tried again with Photoshop LE, which many people felt included all the difficulty of full Photoshop, but still gave too little of what you needed to do top-notch work. Finally—sort of like Goldilocks—Adobe got it just right with Photoshop Elements, which took off like crazy because it offers so much of Photoshop’s power in a program that almost anyone can learn.
With Elements, you, too, can work with the same wonderful tools that the pros use. Elements has been around for quite a while now and, in each new version, Adobe has added lots of push-button-easy ways to correct and improve your photos. Enhance photos by editing, cropping, and color-correcting them, including fixing exposure and color problems.
Add all kinds of special effects to images, like turning a garden-variety photo into a drawing, painting, or even a tile mosaic. Combine photos into a panorama or montage. Move someone from one photo to another, and even remove people (your ex, perhaps) from last year’s holiday photos. Repair and restore old and damaged photos. Organize photos and assign keywords to them so you can search by subject or name. Add text to images and turn them into things like greeting cards and flyers.
Create slideshows to share with friends, regardless of whether they use Windows, a Mac, or even just a cellphone. Automatically resize photos so they’re ready to send either as regular email attachments or in specially designed emails. Create digital artwork from scratch, even without a photo to work from. Create email-ready slideshows that will make your friends actually ask to see your vacation photos.
Create and edit graphics for websites. Create wonderful projects like collages and calendars that you can print or digitally share with friends. Scrapbookers—get ready to be wowed. It’s worth noting, though, that there are still a few things Elements can’t do. While the program handles text quite competently, at least as photo-editing programs go, it’s still no substitute for QuarkxPress, InDesign, or any other desktop-publishing program.
And Elements can do an amazing job of fixing problems in photos, but only if you give it something to work with. If your photo is totally overexposed, blurry, and the top of everyone’s head is cut off, there’s a limit to what even Elements can do to salvage it. (C’mon, be fair.) But you’re more likely to be surprised by what Elements can fix than by what it can’t. What’s New in Elements 12 The most important changes in Elements 12 stem from the fact that Adobe is moving towards making Elements a 64-bit program, although for Elements 12, only the Mac version is 64-bits. What does that mean and why is it important? For many years, the great majority of computer programs were 32 bit, including all versions of Elements prior to version 12.
The most important disadvantage of a 32-bit program is that no matter how much RAM your computer has, a 32-bit program can only see and take advantage of about 3 GB of RAM. So even if you have, say, 16 GB of RAM, Elements might still stutter at times, because it couldn’t use that extra 13 GB. 64-bit programs don’t have this limitation. (There’s still a limit to how much RAM 64-bit programs can use, but the formula is complex and depends on other variables besides how much RAM is in a computer.
All you need to know is that it’s much, much higher.) So that’s the good news (if you have a Mac). The not-so-good news is that if you’ve used Elements before, some of your old favorite features may be missing from Elements 12 because either Adobe didn’t have time to rewrite them for 64-bits, or they were so old that Adobe didn’t think it was worth the effort. (You’ll learn about which features Adobe removed in the relevant places in this book; a few are mentioned in the list below.) However, Adobe did find time to refine the new Organizer that first appeared in Elements 11 for 64 bits, and to add several new features. Here’s a brief rundown of the main changes in Elements 12.
Note Officially Adobe says that, to run Elements 12, you need to have at least OS X 10.7 (a.k.a. Lion), but if you have OS X 10.6 (a.k.a. Snow Leopard) it may be worth downloading the trial version of Elements 12 to see what you think. (To find out which version of OS X you have, go to the Apple menu and choose About This Mac.) If you use Organizer, you’re probably better off sticking with Elements 11, but some people find the Editor works well in OS X 10.6.
Adobe retired some older features. If you’re a fan of Color Variations, the Magic Extractor, Frame from Video, or the Interactive mode for panoramas, you’ll be sad to learn that those are all gone now.
Effects and frames in Quick Edit. Now the Quick Fix window not only lets you make fast corrections to your photos, but you can also apply special effects to them and frame them there, too. Pet eye correction.
For years people have been asking Adobe to modify the Red Eye Removal tool so they can also use it on the green reflections in animals’ eyes. Content Aware Move tool. This great new tool lets you select an object and move it elsewhere in your photo. Not only that, but it analyzes the area where the object used to be and fills in that area so there’s no hole left behind. Straighten and Fill Edges.
This feature is yet another new way to use content-aware technology in Elements. Now when you use the Straighten tool on the contents of a photo, you can tell Elements to create new material to fill any gaps left along the edges after straightening. Auto Smart Tone. This new command not only gives you a simple way to adjust the tonal values of photos, but it also learns from each image you edit so it can make better decisions in the future. Organizer updates. If you’re a longtime user of the Elements Organizer—which lets you manage your photos using a system of tags and categories (see )—you may be aware that the Organizer was heavily redesigned in Elements 11.
Elements 12 builds on that, bringing a number of requested features, like the ability to use Place and Event tags in the main Organizer window, and to remove IPTC metadata from multiple photos at once. The Organizer’s search feature has improved, as well. Revel integration. If you used an older version of Elements, you probably know that Photoshop.com, Adobe’s old online photo sharing space, is gone.
It’s been replaced by Adobe’s new Revel service, which is free for a certain number of photos and then charges a monthly fee if you want to upload more. Revel is very much part of the Organizer in Elements 12, but it’s up to you whether or not to use it. New guided edits. Guided Edit mode—where Elements walks you through various photo projects and editing tasks—includes some new choices: Zoom Burst, which gives your photo a look similar to what you’d get by using your camera to zoom in on the subject of a photo while the shutter is open; Puzzle Effect, which makes your photo look like a jigsaw puzzle (optionally only partly completed); and Restore Old Picture, which steps through fixing faded and damaged old photos. Open in Camera Raw. Many people like to use the Raw Converter to edit files in formats like JPEG and TIFF, in addition to raw files. In previous versions of Elements, you could work with files in these formats in the Raw Converter, but it wasn’t always very obvious how to go about it.
Elements 12 includes a handy “Open in Camera Raw” command. Online connection for installation. You need an active Internet connection to install Elements 12, as explained on.
Once the program is installed and you’ve created an Adobe ID, you can run Elements without being online, although most of the goodies in the Graphics panel are stored online, so you’ll need an Internet connection to download those the first time you use them. Photoshop You could easily get confused about the differences between Elements and the full version of Adobe Photoshop. Because Elements is so much less expensive, and because many of its more advanced controls are tucked away, a lot of Photoshop aficionados tend to view Elements as some kind of toy version of their program. They couldn’t be more wrong: Elements is Photoshop, but it’s Photoshop adapted for use with a home printer and the Web.
The most important difference between Elements and Photoshop is that Elements doesn’t let you work or save files in CMYK mode, which is the format used for commercial color printing. (CMYK stands for Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, and blacK.) Your inkjet printer also uses those ink colors to print, but it expects you to give it an RGB file, which is what Elements creates. Don’t worry—this is all explained in. Elements also lacks several tools that are basic staples in any commercial art department, like the extra color control you can get from Selective Color Adjustment layers and the Pen tool’s special talent for creating vector paths. Also, layer styles (the feature you use to create some special effects, like drop shadows and bevels) don’t have as many settings in Elements as they do in Photoshop.
(In Elements, you start with a given preset style and make changes to it; in Photoshop, you can create a style from scratch.) The same holds true for a handful of other Elements tools. And although Elements is all most people need to create graphics for the Web, it doesn’t come with the advanced Photoshop tools that let you do things like automatically slice images into smaller pieces for faster web display. If you use Elements, then you’ll have to look for another program to help with that. If you’re experienced with Photoshop and looking for an alternative that doesn’t require a subscription, it’s a good idea to download the trial version of Elements first, just to be sure it can do everything you want. If you want to be able to work with layers in 16-bit files, for example, Elements probably isn’t for you.
On the other hand, you won’t find many alternatives that offer that capability, either, and you may need to decide how much you’re willing to give up in exchange for getting away from Adobe’s Creative Cloud. The Key to Learning Elements Elements may not be quite as powerful as Photoshop, but it’s still a complex program, filled with more features than most people ever use. The good news is that the Quick Fix window lets you get started right away, even if you don’t understand every last option Quick Fix presents you with. You also get Guided Edit mode , which provides step-by-step walkthroughs of popular editing tasks, like sharpening a photo or cropping it to fit on standard photo paper. As for the program’s more complex features, the key to learning how to use Elements—or any other program, for that matter—is to focus only on what you need to know for the task you’re currently trying to accomplish. For example, if you’re trying to use Quick Fix to adjust the color of your photo and crop it, don’t worry that you don’t get the concept of layers yet.
You won’t learn to do everything in Elements in a day or even a week. The rest will wait until you need it, so take your time and don’t fret about what’s not important to you right now.
You’ll find it much easier to master Elements if you go slowly and concentrate on one thing at a time. If you’re totally new to the program, then you’ll find only three or four big concepts in this book that you really need to understand if you want to get the most out of Elements. It may take a little time for some concepts to sink in—resolution and layers, for instance, aren’t the most intuitive concepts in the world—but once they click, they’ll seem so obvious that you’ll wonder why they were confusing at first. That’s perfectly normal, so persevere. You can do this, and there’s nothing in this book that you can’t understand with a little bit of careful reading. The very best way to learn Elements is just to dive right in and play with it. Try all the different filters to see what they do.
Add a filter on top of another filter. Click all the different tools and try them. You don’t even need to have a photo open to do this. See to learn how to make an image from scratch in Elements, and keep an eye out for the many downloadable practice images you’ll find at this book’s companion website at. Get crazy—you can stack up as many filters, effects, and layer styles as you want without crashing the program. About This Book Elements is a cool program that’s lots of fun to use, but figuring out how to make it do what you want is another matter.
Elements’ Help files are pretty good, but of course you need to know what you’re looking for to use them to your best advantage. (Elements’ Help files are online; you can download a PDF of them from Adobe’s Elements support pages at.) You’ll find a slew of Elements titles at your local bookstore, but most of them assume that you know quite a bit about the basics of photography and/or digital imaging.
It’s much easier to find good intermediate books about Elements than books designed to get you going with the program. That’s where this book comes in. It’s intended to make learning Elements easier by avoiding technical jargon as much as possible, and explaining why and when you’ll want to use (or avoid) certain features of the program.
That approach is as useful to people who are advanced photographers as it is to those who are just getting started with their first digital cameras. Note This book periodically recommends other books, covering topics too specialized or tangential for a manual about Elements. Careful readers may notice that not all of these titles are published by Missing Manual parent O’Reilly Media.
While we’re happy to mention other Missing Manuals and books in the O’Reilly family, if there’s a great book out there that doesn’t happen to be published by O’Reilly, we’ll still let you know about it. You’ll also find instructions throughout this book that refer to files you can download from the Missing Manual website so you can practice the techniques you’re reading about.
And in various spots, you’ll find several different kinds of short articles (a.k.a. The ones labeled “Up to Speed” are designed to help newcomers to Elements, or they explain concepts with which veterans are probably already familiar.
Those labeled “Power Users’ Clinic” cover more advanced topics that won’t be of much interest to casual photographers. A Note About Operating Systems This book covers using Elements with both Windows computers and Macs, and you’ll see both platforms represented in the illustrations. (Frankly, you’ll see more Mac screenshots here, simply because some things are easier to read in the Mac version of the program.
For example, pop-out menus are more likely to have a white background on a Mac instead of a dark one.) The Editor (the part of Elements where you tweak photos) works exactly the same way regardless of what kind of computer you’re using, but there are some differences in the Organizer and the projects available to you, and those are noted as necessary. Also, most of the keyboard shortcuts you use to run commands are different in Windows and on Macs; explains how those shortcuts are notated in this book. Note Alas, the version of Elements sold in the Mac App Store wasn’t available when this book was written, and certain things are unique about that version, like many of the file paths to the various pieces of the program. If you have the App Store version, head to this book’s Missing CD page at for info about any differences between your version of the program and the standard version.
So remember: It doesn’t matter which version of the program is shown in the illustrations; unless this book says otherwise, the differences are just slight cosmetic ones, like the fact that you close Mac program windows by clicking a button on their left, whereas in Windows the button is on the right. Note Adobe’s video-editing program, Premiere Elements, also uses the Elements Organizer, and if you install both programs, your Photoshop Elements menus will show a lot of Premiere Elements choices, too.
These are normally turned off when you install only Photoshop Elements, but if they get turned on by mistake and you don’t care to see them, you can turn most of them off by launching the Organizer and going to Edit→Preferences→Editing on a PC or Elements Organizer→Preferences→Editing on a Mac. (Appendix B, available at, explains all the Organizer’s menus. Appendix C, also online, covers the Editor’s menus.).
The first part of this book helps you get started with the program. Shows how to navigate Elements’ slightly confusing layout and mish-mash of programs within programs. You’ll learn how to decide where to start from and how to customize Elements so it best suits your working style.
You’ll also read about some important keyboard shortcuts, and where to look for help when you get stuck. Covers how to get photos into Elements, the basics of organizing them, and how to open files and create new images from scratch. You’ll also find out how to save and back up images.
Explains how to rotate and crop photos, and includes a primer on that most important digital imaging concept—resolution. Shows how to use the Quick Fix window to dramatically improve your photos. And cover two key concepts that you’ll use throughout this book: making selections and working with layers. Having Elements is like having a darkroom on your computer. In, you’ll learn how to make basic corrections, such as fixing exposure, adjusting color, sharpening images, and removing dust and scratches.
Covers topics unique to people who use digital cameras, like raw conversion and batch-processing photos. In, you’ll move on to more sophisticated fixes, like using the Clone Stamp tool to make repairs, making photos livelier by adjusting their color intensity, and adjusting light and shadows in images. Shows you how to convert color photos to black and white, and how to tint and colorize black-and-white photos.
Explains how to use Elements’ Photomerge feature to create a panorama from several photos, and to correct perspective problems in images. This part covers the fun stuff: painting on photos and drawing shapes , using filters and effects to create more artistic looks , and adding text to images.
Once you’ve created a great image in Elements, you’ll want to share it, so this part is about how to create fun projects like collages , how to get the most out of your printer , how to create files to use on the Web and in email , and how to make slideshows and share them online. You can get hundreds of plug-ins and additional styles, brushes, and other nifty tools to customize your copy of Elements and increase its abilities; the Internet and your local bookstore are chock-full of additional info. Offers a look at some of these resources, as well as information about using a graphics tablet with Elements, and suggests some places to turn after you finish this book. Helps you get your copy of Elements up and running, and suggests what to do if it starts misbehaving. Appendixes B and C—which you can download from this book’s Missing CD web page (see )—cover all the menu items in the Organizer and Editor, respectively. Read all of.
That’s important for understanding how to get around in Elements. If your photos aren’t on your computer already, then read about the Photo Downloader in. The Downloader gets photos from your camera’s memory card into Elements. If you want to organize your photos, then read about the Organizer (also in, starting on ). It doesn’t matter where your photos are right now. If you want to use the Organizer to label and keep track of them, then read. When you’re ready to edit your photos, read Chapters.
Explains how to adjust your view of photos in the Editor. Shows you how to use the Quick Fix window to easily edit and correct photos. Guided Edit can also be very helpful when you’re just getting started.
If you skipped because you’re not using the Organizer, then go back there and read the part about saving photos so you don’t lose your work. When you’re ready to print or share your photos, flip to the chapters on sharing images.
Covers printing, both at home and from online services. Explains how to email photos, and teaches you how to create slideshows. That’s all you need to get started. You can come back and pick up the rest of the info in the book as you get more comfortable with Elements and want to explore more of the wonderful things you can do with it. The Very Basics This book assumes that you know how to perform basic activities on your computer like clicking and double-clicking your mouse buttons and dragging objects onscreen. Here’s a quick refresher: To click means to move the pointer of your mouse or trackpad cursor over an object on your screen, and then press the left mouse or trackpad button once.
To right-click means to press the right mouse button once, which calls up a menu of special features. To double-click means to press the left button twice, quickly, without moving the mouse between clicks. To drag means to click an object and then to hold down the left button while you use the mouse to move the object. Most onscreen selection buttons are pretty obvious, but you may not be familiar with radio buttons: To choose an option, click the little empty circle next to it. In Elements, you’ll often want to use keyboard shortcuts to save time, and this book tells you about these shortcuts when they exist (and Elements has a lot).
In this book, unless otherwise specified, keyboard shortcuts are always presented as Windows keystroke/Mac keystroke. So if you see a sentence like, “Press Ctrl+S/⌘-S to save your file,” that means that if you use Windows, you should hold down the Ctrl key while pressing the S key, and if you have a Mac, you should hold down the ⌘ key while pressing the S key. There’s one slight exception to this: When you see “right-click/Control-click,” if you have a Mac and a two-button mouse, you can right-click. But if you have a one-button mouse, you can Control-click instead—that means to press the Control key on your keyboard and then press your mouse button once. If you’re comfortable with basic concepts like these, then you’re ready to get started with this book. About→These→Arrows Throughout this book (and the Missing Manual series) you’ll see sentences like this: “In the Editor, select Filter→Artistic→Paint Daubs.” This is a shorthand way of helping you find files, folders, and menu items without having to read through excruciatingly long, bureaucratic-style instructions.
So the sample sentence above is a short way of saying this: “In the Editor component of Elements, in the menu bar at the top of the screen, click the word ‘Filter.’ In the menu that appears, choose the Artistic menu item, and then go to Paint Daubs in the pop-out menu.” shows you an example in action. Mac file paths are shown using the same arrows. Windows file paths, on the other hand, are shown in the conventional Windows style, so if you see, “Go to C: Documents and Settings My Documents My Pictures,” that means you should go to your C drive, open the Documents and Settings folder, look for your user account folder, and then find the My Documents folder. In that folder, open the My Pictures folder that’s inside it.
Figure 1. In a Missing Manual, when you see a phrase like “Image→Rotate→Free Rotate Layer,” that’s a quicker way of saying, “Go to the menu bar, click Image, slide down to Rotate, and then, from the pop-up menu, choose Free Rotate Layer.” When there are different file paths for Windows XP, Vista, 7, and 8, you’ll find them all listed in this book. Like keyboard shortcuts, file paths are shown as Windows file path/Mac file path when all versions of Windows use the same file path. Otherwise, all the different versions are specified. If you’re using a Mac, there’s one special challenge finding some of the files mentioned in this book; specifically, the ones located in the Library folders. ( explains.) Also, if you buy Elements from the Mac App Store, all the files are actually inside the application itself, which means your file paths will be different. (This book covers the version of Elements that was released in September 2013, so you won’t see so much information about App Store–version’s file paths, since that information wasn’t available when this book was written. Check this book’s Missing CD page at for updated information after the App Store version is released.).
Figure 2. In OS X, Apple has made it a little harder to find your Library folders. The one you’ll need most often resides at the very top level of your hard drive. This folder isn’t exactly hidden, but it never appears unless you change your settings to make it accessible. To do that, in the Finder, go to Finder→Preferences→Sidebar and, in the Devices section, turn on the “Hard disks” checkbox (circled). After that, you can always find the Library folder by just clicking the name of your hard drive in the list on the left side of a Finder window. The other Library folder you may need is the one for your user account, which is a hidden file. To make it visible, in the Finder, open the Go menu and then press the Option key.
Your user account’s Library folder will appear in the menu just below your Home folder. Note If you’re using a 64-bit version of Windows, you have two folders labeled Program Files. Windows puts 64-bit programs into the folder simply named Program Files, but Elements, like many programs you may install, is a 32-bit program, and Windows puts 32-bit programs into a folder named Program Files (x86). If you have a folder named Program Files (x86), then that’s where you should always look for Elements’ files. This book includes a reminder note every time this applies, such as, “Go to C: Program Files Program Files (x86) on a 64-bit system Adobe Elements 11 Organizer.”. Safari® Books Online Safari Books Online is an on-demand digital library that lets you easily search over 7,500 technology and creative reference books and videos to find the answers you need quickly. With a subscription, you can read any page and watch any video from our library online.
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