Teach Yourself VISUALLY Photoshop Elements 6 (Teach Yourself VISUALLY (Tech))

Books : Teach Yourself VISUALLY Photoshop Elements 6 (Teach Yourself VISUALLY (Tech))

Teach Yourself VISUALLY Photoshop Elements 6 (Teach Yourself VISUALLY (Tech))

by: Mike Wooldridge, Linda Wooldridge



 : Teach Yourself VISUALLY Photoshop Elements 6 (Teach Yourself VISUALLY (Tech))
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Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 006.686
EAN: 9780470177440
ISBN: 0470177446
Label: Visual
Manufacturer: Visual
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 352
Publication Date: 2008-01-03
Publisher: Visual
Studio: Visual



Editorial Review:

Product DescriptionIf you’re a visual learner, this book is for you. Clear, step-by-step screen shots show you how to tackle more than 150 common tasks using Photoshop Elements 6, in task-based spreads with easy, visual directions. Learn to work with toolboxes and palettes, import and organize images, map photos, create slide shows, enhance contrast and colors, combine images, and much more. Helpful sidebars offer practical tips and tricks, and succinct explanations walk you through step by step.

















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Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - A bit too superficial for me
The screen shots and clip art are great. However, the book is very elementary and doesn't address many techniques in depth. For instance, it touches on albums and keytags, but doesn't talk about categories at all. It says it tells how to add photos to catalogs, but it doesn't. It doesn't discuss how to use catalogs, albums, categories, sub-categories and keytags to really organize photos.

It does a nice job explaining layers, so it is worth the money I spent for that. However, it doesn't talk about how to do some common, basic tasks such as erasing power lines and window air conditioners from photos.

I am searching for a more comprehensive book on Elements 6.0.



Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - No help at all
Two hours of reading and still can't figure out how to attach pictures from Photoshop to Yahoo e-mail.



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - A few things don't match, otherwise very good.
Ocassionally I've found a few visuals that don't match my screen.........then I have to go back to a previous chapter and try to work through it. It might be that I have a slightly different version of PSE 6. Sometimes the visual is a bit small for my old eyes. But in all, the chapters are well done.



Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - Good but not great
This book is probably worth the money- it does help- but don't expect to be able to follow each and every step of each and every procedure.



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - simplicity at last
At last a PhotoShop book that is easy to use and understand. As the old saying goes, One picture is worth a thousand words. Following along with the pictures makes difficult tasks easy. In a few instances, the pictures do need some additional explanation for a complete understanding. However, that is more than offset by the ease of things like layers, gradients, & selections. I am sold on the Visual books.



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How the Honeycrisp apple went from being nearly discarded to one of the tastiest best-named apples of all time -- NYTimes says "the iPod of apples" -- and more about the patenting and branding of apples.
"[D]uring its time of evaluation, Honeycrisp, being a beautiful but partially-colored apple, effectively waited in the wings until the big stage was set. I'm not saying the University would not have introduced Honeycrisp against the tide of Red and Golden. I don't know that. It just takes years to get to the point of taking the leap, and maybe 1991 would have been the leaping point regardless of the current. But there's no doubt Honeycrisp jumped into a very favorable current, one that had been started with Granny Smith and had gained irreversible momentum with Gala and Fuji. Its time had come.

But even when your time has come, if you're an apple, it'll still be a while. There are millions of Honeycrisp trees in the ground right now, but a production ranking is nowhere in sight. Like Gala, Honeycrisp will take a few more years before it climbs out of the "All Others" category.

So, if you're David Bedford, and you evaluated a variety for many years until 1991 and then released it, and it's been out now for well over a decade and it's still in "All Others," you've done a wonderful job. That's just the speed of this game. Honeycrisp is on a meteoric rise. This is a thing that's happening very fast, in apple terms."





Teach Yourself VISUALLY Photoshop Elements 6 (Teach Yourself VISUALLY (Tech))

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