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ADOBE PHOTOSHOP ELEMENTS 9

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USING <strong>PHOTOSHOP</strong> <strong>ELEMENTS</strong> 9<br />

Color and tonal correction<br />

114<br />

Automatically correct lighting and color<br />

Photoshop Elements provides several automatic lighting and color-correction commands in both Full Edit and Quick<br />

Fix. The command you choose depends on the needs of your image.<br />

You can experiment with each of the auto commands. If you don’t like the result of one, undo the command by<br />

choosing Edit > Undo, and try another command. You will rarely need to use more than one auto command to fix an<br />

image.<br />

1 To adjust a specific image area, select it with one of the selection tools. If no selection is made, the adjustment<br />

applies to the entire image.<br />

2 Choose one of the following commands from the Enhance menu:<br />

Auto Smart Fix Corrects overall color balance and improves shadow and highlight detail, if necessary.<br />

Auto Levels Adjusts the overall contrast of an image and may affect its color. If your image needs more contrast, and<br />

it has a color cast, try this command. Auto Levels works by individually mapping the lightest and darkest pixels in each<br />

color channel to black and white.<br />

Auto Contrast Adjusts the overall contrast of an image without affecting its color. Use when your image needs more<br />

contrast, but the colors look right. Auto Contrast maps the lightest and darkest pixels in the image to white and black,<br />

which makes highlights appear lighter and shadows appear darker.<br />

Auto Color Correction Adjusts the contrast and color by identifying shadows, midtones, and highlights in the image,<br />

rather than in individual color channels. It neutralizes the midtones and sets the white and black points using a default<br />

set of values.<br />

Auto Sharpen Adjusts the sharpness of the image by clarifying the edges and adding detail that tonal adjustments may<br />

reduce.<br />

Auto Red Eye Fix Automatically detects and repairs red eye in an image.<br />

More Help topics<br />

“Precisely remove red eye” on page 147<br />

“Replace colors in an image” on page 152<br />

“Sharpen an image” on page 164<br />

About histograms<br />

You can use the histogram to analyze the image’s tonal distribution to see if you need to correct it. A histogram shows<br />

the distribution of an image’s pixel values in a bar chart. The left side of the chart shows the values of the image shadow<br />

(starting at level 0), and the right side shows the highlight (level 255). The vertical axis of the chart represents the total<br />

number of pixels within a given level.<br />

You can view an image’s histogram in the Histogram panel. Histograms are also available in the Levels dialog box and<br />

the Camera Raw dialog box. You can update the histogram as you work so that you can see how your adjustments are<br />

affecting the tonal range. When the Cached Data Warning icon appears, click it to refresh the histogram’s data.<br />

Last updated 1/27/2011

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