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ADOBE PHOTOSHOP ELEMENTS 9

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

Working in Photoshop Elements<br />

47<br />

ICC Profile Embed a color profile in the image for certain formats.<br />

Thumbnail Saves thumbnail data for the file. This option is available when the Ask When Saving option for Image<br />

Previews is set in the Preferences dialog box.<br />

Use Lower Case Extension Makes the file extension lowercase.<br />

Note: UNIX file servers are often used to help send information over networks and the Internet. Some of these servers do<br />

not recognize uppercase extensions. To make sure your images arrive at their destinations, use lowercase extensions.<br />

Save a file in GIF format<br />

1 In the Edit workspace, choose File > Save As.<br />

2 Specify a filename and location, and choose CompuServe GIF Format from the format list.<br />

Your image is saved as a copy in the specified directory (unless it's already in indexed-color mode).<br />

3 If you are creating an animated GIF, select the Layers As Frames option. Each layer in the final file will play as a<br />

single frame in the animated GIF.<br />

4 Click Save. If your original image is RGB, the Indexed Color dialog box appears.<br />

5 If necessary, specify indexed color options in the Indexed Color dialog box and click OK.<br />

6 In the GIF Options dialog box, select a row order for the GIF file and click OK:<br />

Normal Displays the image in a browser only when the image is fully downloaded.<br />

Interlaced Displays a series of low-resolution versions of the image while the full image file is downloaded to the<br />

browser. Interlacing can make downloading time seem shorter and assures viewers that downloading is in progress.<br />

However, interlacing also increases file size.<br />

Save a file in JPEG format<br />

1 In the Edit workspace, choose File > Save As, and choose JPEG from the format list.<br />

Note: You cannot save indexed-color and bitmap mode images in JPEG format.<br />

2 Specify a filename and location, select file-saving options, and click Save.<br />

The JPEG Options dialog box opens.<br />

3 If the image contains transparency, select a Matte color to simulate the appearance of background transparency.<br />

4 Specify image compression and quality by choosing an option from the Quality menu, dragging the Quality slider,<br />

or entering a value between 1 and 12.<br />

5 Select a format option:<br />

Baseline (“Standard”) Uses a format that is recognizable to most web browsers.<br />

Baseline Optimized Optimizes the color quality of the image and produces a slightly smaller file size. This option is<br />

not supported by all web browsers.<br />

Progressive Creates an image that is gradually displayed as it is downloaded to a web browser. Progressive JPEG files<br />

are slightly larger in size, require more RAM for viewing, and are not supported by all applications and web browsers.<br />

6 To view the estimated download time of the image, select a modem speed from the Size pop-up menu. (The Size<br />

preview is available only when Preview is selected.)<br />

Note: If a Java application cannot read your JPEG file, try saving the file without a thumbnail preview.<br />

7 Click OK.<br />

Last updated 1/27/2011

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