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Photoshop Elements 8: Top 100 Simplified Tips and Tricks (Top 100 Simplified Tips & Tricks) Paperback – January 7, 2010
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Packed with beyond-the-basic techniques that show you how to take your Photoshop Elements skills to the next level, this invaluable book reveals ground-breaking ideas and innovative tips and tricks for taking digital images from basic know-how to creative wow!
Provides adventurous Photoshop Elements users with a visual reference on how to use the bells and whistles found in the latest version of the software, Photoshop Elements 8 Distinguishes itself as not your ordinary how-to guide by revealing the best features of Photoshop Elements 8 Offers easy-to-follow, full color step-by-step instructions and detailed imagery throughout Take your image editing skills to new heights with the featured Photoshop Elements 8 tips and tricks.
- Print length272 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherVisual
- Publication dateJanuary 7, 2010
- Dimensions8.55 x 0.65 x 10.05 inches
- ISBN-100470566914
- ISBN-13978-0470566916
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Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
Photoshop Elements combines an easy-to-use set of features and enhancements with image editing power in an affordable program. The newest version—Photoshop Elements 8—features more online integration with products like the new Flash-based Web galleries.
Packed with beyond-the-basic techniques that show you how to take your Photoshop Elements skills to the next level, this invaluable book reveals ground-breaking ideas and innovative tips and tricks for taking digital images from basic know-how to creative wow!
- Provides adventurous Photoshop Elements users with a visual reference on how to use the bells and whistles found in the latest version of the software, Photoshop Elements 8
- Distinguishes itself as not your ordinary how-to guide by revealing the best features of Photoshop Elements 8
- Offers easy-to-follow, full color step-by-step instructions and detailed imagery throughout
Take your image editing skills to new heights with the featured Photoshop Elements 8 tips and tricks.
Photoshop Elements 8 Tips for Getting Started
Amazon-exclusive content from author Rob Sheppard
1. Work the photo, not the program. It is easy to get overwhelmed by the software and forget what is really important -- your photograph! Do what you need for the photograph, not what you think you should do in the program.
2. Save the originals. Whenever you open a photo into Photoshop Elements, immediately do a “Save As” to create a new image file for you to work on. This allows you to preserve the original file so that it cannot be affected directly and you will always have it if you run into problems with your work later.
3. Always back up your photos. Big external hard drives are very inexpensive now. Copy your digital photos from their folders on your computer to an external drive so that you have at least one complete copy of all of your images for back up. There is a saying in the industry, “It isn’t ‘if’ your hard drive will fail, but when.” Be prepared for that “when” by backing up your photos. Many hard drives now come with automated backup software that can help.
4. Right-click your mouse for more information. Photoshop Elements is filled with extremely helpful context-sensitive menus. They are only accessible when you right-click on a part of the interface. Right-click on the photo and you get a menu related to the tool you are using. Right-click in the layer panel and you get an entirely different menu. If you are working with a Mac, get and use a right-click mouse.
5. Remember the “undo” command. Use Control + Z for Windows and Command + Z for the Mac. This is very freeing because it means you cannot hurt your photo as you work. If anything doesn’t look right, just undo it.
6. Consider using RAW files. RAW files offer you more flexibility in processing your photos and can be processed with Photoshop Elements, in its Camera Raw software. RAW is not arbitrarily better than JPEG but can give you better results if you are willing to work with it and use its flexibility in processing.
7. Learn layers. Layers seem intimidating to many photographers, yet once you start using them, you will find all sorts of ways to use them in order to make your image processing faster, better and more flexible.
8. Never worry about knowing everything in Photoshop Elements. Learn and use what is most appropriate to your photography. After all, Ansel Adams could only make his prints bigger or smaller, lighter or darker, more or less contrasty, as well as lighter/darker or more/less contrasty in small areas, and that was about it. Yet look at what he accomplished with these “limited” controls.
9. Practice makes perfect. The way to get better with Photoshop Elements and to work faster and more efficiently with your images is to spend some time with Elements. You have to put in the time in order to save time later. Playing around with lots of photos, seeing what all the controls do, failing as well as succeeding, will all help you become a better photo processor with Elements.
10. Feel free to experiment. If you aren’t sure how a control works, or even if you should use it at all, just try it. As long as you do not save your work over the image file, you cannot hurt your photo. If you experiment and it doesn’t work, simply undo the changes or go to the Undo History panel to back up in your adjustments.
From the Back Cover
You already know Photoshop Elements 8 basics. Now you'd like to go beyond with shortcuts, tricks, and tips that let you work smarter and faster. And because you learn more easily when someone shows you how, this is the book for you. Inside, you'll find clear, illustrated instructions for 100 tasks that reveal cool secrets, teach timesaving tricks, and explain great tips guaranteed to make you more productive with Photoshop Elements 8.
Minimal text and maximum illustrations
Task-oriented, step-by-step approach
Navigational aids connect instructions to illustrations
Self-contained, two-page lessons
Uniform layout makes it easy to read less, learn more
How easy is it?
Look for these symbols marking the difficulty of each task.
Demonstrates a new spin on a common task
Introduces a new skill or a new task
Combines multiple skills requiring in-depth knowledge
Requires extensive skill and may involve other technologies
Product details
- Publisher : Visual; 1st edition (January 7, 2010)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 272 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0470566914
- ISBN-13 : 978-0470566916
- Item Weight : 1.75 pounds
- Dimensions : 8.55 x 0.65 x 10.05 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #6,167,808 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,067 in Adobe Photoshop
- #4,801 in Digital Photography (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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About the author

I am proud of the work I have done as a photographer, author, naturalist and nature photographer, editor and videographer. I love the natural world, and that can be a native bee in my native plants garden as much as a visit to a national park. I am a husband of a beautiful and smart wife, a father to my outstanding son and daughter, and one who lived in Minnesota most of my life, but now loves the variety and very long growing season of Southern California.
I have written and photographed a lot of books and magazine articles but what is most important to me about them is knowing that I have helped people become better photographers and gain a better connection to nature. I work to help people connect with photography and nature through speaking and as a workshop leader, too. All of this has gained me a Fellow award with the North American Nature Photography Association. Many people knew me as the long-time, previous editor of Outdoor Photographer magazine.
A short list of some of the books I have done: Landscape Photography: From Snapshot to Great Shot, Magic of Digital Landscape Photography, The Magic of Digital Nature Photography, National Geographic Field Guide to Digital Photography, The Power of Black-and-White in Nature Photography and Reports from the Field (an iBook).
My website is at www.robsheppardphoto.com; my blogs are at www.natureandphotography.com and www.mirrorlessnature.com.
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Having said all this, I guess I should give myself some credit and point out that I suppose I'm not entirely dim-witted (I somehow managed to acquire 2 Masters degrees and a PhD during my lifetime), just to lend some level of creditability to my reviews. But when it comes to things like this, I need all the help I can get, and this book does just that. And it does it extremely well. In fact, there have been several instances in which I proclaimed, "Wow! I could have figured that out on my own!" after reading about a particular component of Photoshop - but of course, I likely would not have been, or it would have taken me forever to do so.
In a nutshell, Rob Sheppard has given us an easy-to-follow, inexpensive tutorial - more like a "treasure map", so to speak - on a software package that seems to have limitless potential!
The reason it received only three stars from me is because the graphics used to illustrate the steps are too small. In over half the tips/tricks, you cannot actually see the effect that is being taught because it is too subtle for such a small illustration. I'm really shocked that this got by the editorial process. It must have been an economic decision because larger illustrations would have taken more pages and raised the cost of printing the book.
My suggestion would be to remove the second to the last chapter on add-ons and use those pages gained to enlarge the picture illustrations. I don't think the average person trying to learn PSE through this book is going to consider purchasing expensive add-ons until he or she has a better understanding of the base program. The add-on chapter seemed more like an advertisement for the add-ons than an actual tip or trick. That was the only chapter that disappointed me.
May 31st 2011
After lots of practice and learning from this book I have discovered that other than the chapter about products you can use that don't even come with the program; the other information is a lot more informative than I had originally thought! I do think that this book is valueable and since I don't use the program daily I have found that I refer back to the book for a quick memory check on how to do something to make my photo's look better! I like having the book vs going on-line to look up something and keep clicking back and forth between my photoshop and the on-line manual.





