Digital Photographer

PHOTOSHOP ELEMENTS 2020

Adobe’s simpler alternativ­e to Photoshop takes a task‑orientated approach to making image edits

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This is Adobe’s simplified alternativ­e to Photoshop. Is it a tool for pro editing?

Adobe introduced the Home Screen with Photoshop Elements 2019. It’s designed to give you quick access to the key features and help you see some of what’s made possible by the software. There’s a helpful search bar at the top of the Home Screen that invites you to type in what you want to do. Just beneath this is a carousel that highlights some of the new features of the latest version of the software.

However, for many photograph­ers the Organizer is the real hub of Adobe Photoshop Elements and Premiere Elements. This has tools to let you import and organise your images using tags, keywords and albums to make them easier to find. Unlike Adobe Lightroom, you don’t have to import images into the Organizer to edit them, but doing so makes it easier to browse and find the image you want to work on. For example, the software can automatica­lly detect faces in your images, and it’s worth spending a few minutes adding names to the faces as it makes finding specific people much quicker at a later date.

If you have a large collection of images, we recommend importing them in batches. That’s because the software doesn’t simply import the file location informatio­n, it also analyses the images to enable you to create stacks of similar shots, which takes quite a bit of time.

After importing some images to the Organizer, tapping ‘Create’ reveals a selection of items that you can make. These include slide shows, collages, prints, photo books, greetings cards, calendars and CD jackets.

With the exception of the photo prints, the templates that Elements offers for printed products have rather fussy background­s.

Even the Monochrome theme for photo books alternates between black and white background­s on pages. It would be nice to have a clean, white option. There’s also very little control over the slide show; you can’t change transition­s or make one of your own images the title slide, for example.

If you’re more interested in perfecting your images than creating things with them, you need to open the Photo Editor. This has three modes – Quick, Guided and Expert – each with a different level of control. You switch between them by clicking on the options at the top of the screen.

As you’d expect, the Quick controls are the simplest and they’re reasonably basic. You can apply different filter effects and use a limited collection of tools to make selections, enhance eyes, whiten teeth, straighten images, add text, clone out unwanted objects or spots, crop images or move selected elements.

The Guided section gives you access to a total of 78 processes using step-by-step wizards to take you through things like resizing, adjusting the exposure, creating monochrome images, cloning out unwanted objects and merging multiple shots of a group of people. Some of the edits are a bit cheesy, but others, especially those in the Basics, Color and Photomerge section, are very useful, and everything is explained clearly.

Generally the auto-selection tools work well, but they can’t always be relied upon and you may need to use the refining tools to get the best results. However, that helps you to learn how to use some of the tools in the Expert area.

As you’d expect, the Expert section has a more comprehens­ive collection of tools in the column on the left of the screen than the Quick area. Also, when you select a tool, its controls appear at the bottom of the screen, which is helpful.

A major bonus of working in the Expert section is that you can create Levels, Brightness/Contrast, Hue/Saturation, Gradient Map, Photo Filter, Invert, Threshold and Posterize adjustment layers. What’s more, it’s possible to create layer masks, which opens up advanced editing opportunit­ies.

If you need to at any point, clicking on the Guided tab allows you to use the Guided edits before returning to the Expert area to make further edits. Helpfully, the Guided edits are applied as new layers, which gives you control over their appearance and opacity in the Expert area – plus you can add layer masks if you want. Switching between the Guided and Expert modes makes the Guided mode much more powerful, because you can make quite complex edits quickly and then adjust them to your taste.

 ??  ?? Below HOME SCREEN
The Home Screen is a good
starting point for novices, especially if you aren’t sure where to find the controls you need to perform the
edit you want to make
Below HOME SCREEN The Home Screen is a good starting point for novices, especially if you aren’t sure where to find the controls you need to perform the edit you want to make
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PEOPLE FINDER
Tapping on the People tab at the top of the Organizer reveals any faces that the software has found in your images. You can add names and group them
Above QUICK EDIT
The Quick edit section is clean and uncluttere­d, so it’s unlikely to intimidate anyone who’s never used an image-editing package before. It’s also very intuitive to use
Below PEOPLE FINDER Tapping on the People tab at the top of the Organizer reveals any faces that the software has found in your images. You can add names and group them Above QUICK EDIT The Quick edit section is clean and uncluttere­d, so it’s unlikely to intimidate anyone who’s never used an image-editing package before. It’s also very intuitive to use

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