Photoshop Elements 10 adds new features that aim to take the guesswork out of cropping, cut down on the time you spend searching, and put you in greater control of your text.
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Our latest entry in the “Quick Video Tips” series walks you through the different options found inside Elements’ Color Picker.
Making composite images that look realistic can be a complicated task. Here, Matt shows you how to make a quick, clean selection, and then how to merge it seamlessly into a new background.
Mike uses three different images — landscape, portrait, and an underexposed photo — to illustrate how to work with the tools and sliders inside Camera Raw.
I start every November with grand plans. I pull out my truffle recipes, devise holiday crafts, and pledge that this will be the year I get my Christmas cards out on time–no, early!
Matt offers some additional tips for enhancing and enriching composites in this companion video to his Quick Collage article.
Pump up the drama and create a great composite by combining two versions of the same shot.
Mike Rodriguez offers a basic introduction and guide to printing your images from Photoshop Elements.
For holiday cards that express your unique personality, skip the templates. We’ll show you how to design custom greeting cards.
Learn how to use your camera–and the magic of pin bokeh–to reshape the lights in your scene.
Elizabeth shows you how to apply a hand-painted colorization effect to a photo.
Adjustment layers offer almost everything you need to subtly enhance the shots you put time and effort into capturing–all without altering a single pixel in your original image.
Discover how easy it is to subtly minimize the appearance of wrinkles, dark spots, and other distractions in your portraits without making your subject look “retouched.”
This is an online companion to Diana Day’s Custom Photo Card article in the upcoming November/December issue of Photoshop Elements Techniques.
Elizabeth delves into the wonderful flexibility found in Gradient Map adjustment layers, showing you how you can use the Gradient Editor to create black and white images and photos with a warm-toned look.
Align the Clone Stamp tool for easier repairs, speed up Elements when it starts to act sluggish, create high-contrast black-and-white photos.
Elements 10′s Guided Edit Mode has a few new options, including a Depth of Field lens effect, a version of the popular Orton look, and Photo Stack, which breaks a single image into a group of collage of four, eight or 12 “snapshots.”
Photoshop Elements 10 adds three overlay options to the Crop tool: a Grid, the Rule of Thirds, and the Golden Mean. Here’s how they work.



















