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ADOBE PHOTOSHOP ELEMENTS 9

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

Camera raw files<br />

85<br />

White Balance tool Sets the area you click to a neutral gray tone to remove color casts and adjust the color of the<br />

entire image. The Temperature and Tint values change to reflect the color adjustment.<br />

Crop tool Removes part of an image. Drag the tool within the preview image to select the portion you want to<br />

keep, and then press Enter.<br />

Straighten tool You can use the Straighten tool to realign an image vertically or horizontally. This tool also resizes<br />

or crops the canvas to accommodate straightening the image.<br />

Red Eye Removal Removes red eye in flash photos of people and green or white eye in pets.<br />

Open Preferences Dialog Opens the Camera Raw Preferences dialog.<br />

Rotate buttons<br />

Rotates the photo either counterclockwise or clockwise.<br />

Set custom camera settings<br />

When you open a camera raw file, Photoshop Elements reads information in the file to see which model of camera<br />

created it, and then applies the appropriate camera settings to the image. If you are always making similar adjustments,<br />

you can change the default settings of your camera. You can also change settings for each model of camera you own,<br />

but not for multiple cameras of the same model.<br />

1 In the Edit workspace, open a camera raw file and adjust the image.<br />

2 To save the current settings as the default for the camera that created the image, click the triangle next to the<br />

Settings menu and choose Save New Camera Raw Default.<br />

3 To use the Photoshop Elements default settings for your camera, click the triangle next to the Settings menu and<br />

choose Reset Camera Raw Default.<br />

Color and camera raw<br />

Using the histogram and RGB values in camera raw<br />

The Camera Raw histogram shows all three channels (red, green, and blue) of the image simultaneously. The<br />

histogram changes automatically as you adjust the settings in the Camera Raw dialog box.<br />

As you move the Zoom tool, Hand tool, or White Balance tool over the preview image, you see the RGB values in the<br />

upper-right corner of the dialog box.<br />

RGB values of an image<br />

Last updated 1/27/2011

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