As you’ll discover in the rest of the book, Photoshop Elements is a sophisticated image editor, enabling anyone to make photo corrections that would have been absurdly difficult years ago. But sometimes you don’t want to be an image expert. Let the computer do the work for you, analyzing photos and correcting them automatically.
When you don’t want to mess with the particulars, or when you know that a photo needs just a bit of tweaking but you want a bit more control over the adjustments, turn to the Quick Fix features. You can experiment on your photo—ranging from slight tonal changes to radical tints and lighting adjustments—and then undo those changes if they seemed better in your mind’s eye than they look on the screen.
The concepts behind the tools in Quick Fix, such as adjusting levels and sharpening, are dealt with later in the book. Use this chapter as a jumping-off point.
When you want Elements to take over and make corrections according to its analysis of a photo, the speediest method is directly in the Quick Edit pane.
Quick Fix is a component of the Editor workspace and gives you a bit more control than the buttons in the Fix pane.
To edit photos in Quick Fix:
Open a file in Elements and then click the Quick option in the Edit pane. The Quick Fix workspace opens .
To set view options:
• From the View menu located below the photo, choose whether you want to see the end result (After Only), the original (Before Only), or a comparison layout (both the Before and After options) .
• Use the Zoom field and slider to specify how zoomed-in you want to be . In the Before and After views, the zoom level applies to both versions.
When the Zoom or Hand tool is active, you can also click the Actual Pixels, Fit Screen, or Print Size buttons in the options bar to switch to those zoom levels.
• If Elements did not rotate your image correctly during import, click the Rotate buttons to turn it clockwise or counterclockwise in 90-degree increments.
The following tools perform common image correction tasks, but we want to start with the most important command first: Reset.
To reset and undo changes:
• After making an adjustment using the tools described in this chapter, click the Cancel button that appears in the tool’s title bar .
• Choose Undo from the Edit menu to undo the previous command.
• If you’ve made several edits and want to revert to the original image, click the Reset button. This removes any Quick Fix adjustments.
To select areas for applying edits:
To apply lighting, color, and sharpening fixes:
To apply fixes using previews:
The slider is still available for fine-tuning, but there’s a better way. Click and drag left or right within the thumbnail to make smaller adjustments.
To crop the image:
To remove red eye:
In the General Fixes area, click the Auto button next to Red Eye Fix.
Or
To apply all edits:
It never hurts to play with the Smart Fix slider. Smart Fix adjusts lighting, color, and sharpening based on its algorithms. In some cases, this may be the only edit you need.
A few tools in the Quick Fix editor are designed to easily fix some specific situations. In the Quick pane, note the addition of four tools in the Tools panel: Red Eye Removal Tool, Whiten Teeth, Make Dull Skies Blue, and Black and White–High Contrast .
Unlike the other Quick Fix edits, which apply their adjustments to the entire image or to an area that you first specify using the Quick Selection tool, these Touch Up tools perform the selection and apply the edit in one step.
To make a Touch Up edit:
Elements makes a selection and applies the effect .
You can apply multiple Touch Up tool edits to the same image. When you click an icon, any adjustment you’ve already made is highlighted for further editing.
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