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[lynda.com presents]
[excerpt from: Adobe Photoshop Elements 7 for Windows Essential Training with Jan Kabili]
Elements packs lots of tools into its tool box.
Knowing how to use tools wisely
will help you be more productive.
Let's talk briefly about some of the productivity enhancing features
around Element's tools.
Now don't worry, I'm not going to take you through the tools
one by one explaining what they mean.
The better way to learn individual tools
is to use them in context as we'll do
in the other movies in this course, but I do
want to show you how to use tools more efficiently.
The first thing I'd like to tell you is that the tool box
is not showing all the tools that are available.
There are so many that some of them have been tucked behind
the tools that are currently visible.
Whenever you see a tool with a black triangle in the bottom right
that means the tool has some other related
tools hiding behind it.
So, for example, if I were to click here on this
eraser tool which has a black triangle on it, I get this fly-out menu
that shows me related tools, the background eraser tool and the magic eraser tool,
and if I wanted to select one of those tools,
instead of the plain eraser tool, I would just move my mouse over it
in this fly-out menu and release,
and now the magic eraser tool is showing in that tool slot.
The other thing I wanted to tell you about tools
is that you don't have to memorize the names
or locations of any tool, instead you can
take advantage of tool tips.
Tool tips work like this:
If I see a tool like this band-aid,
and I have no idea what it is,
I'll just move my mouse over it,
and in a moment the name of the tool appears.
This is the spot-healing brush tool,
which I'll show you how to use in a minute,
and here is the straighten tool, and notice
the letter to the right of the tool name,
in this case a "P,"
those letters are shortcuts,
and as you become more familiar with Elements,
you'll start to use those shortcuts to select a tool.
So for example let me click on a tool, I'm going to click here on the crop tool,
and say I was working with a crop tool, and
when I was done I wanted to move an item.
Then, all I would do is press the shortcut
for the move tool on my keyboard.
Oddly enough that shortcut happens to be the letter "V."
Now watch the tool box,
as soon as I press the letter "V,"
the focus went to this tool up here
which is the move tool.
Tool shortcuts will really save you a lot of time.
Another thing I'd like to show you
is in this bar called the options bar.
As you know, when you select different
tools in the tool box, the options bar changes
because it's context sensitive.
If I were to select a tool like the crop tool in the options bar
I see only options related to cropping.
Some of the options here are
what we call sticky, so that if I were
to type a width and a height
here into the options bar for the crop tool,
and then I use the crop tool,
and then I went on to do some other things, maybe typing or
using the red-eye tool
or the paint-brush tool, and then I decided
I wanted to crop again, and I went back to the crop tool.
I may not remember that I had put those options in the crop tool,
and I would be surprised to find that I was
unable to use the crop tool as I wanted
it to work, that it kept going to 6 x 4 inches.
So, here is the productivity tip
to solve that problem:
Every once in awhile,
I do this every time I launch the program,
go to this tiny arrow at the top left of the options bar and click there,
and you will see a menu that gives you
the option to reset this particular tool,
in this case the crop tool, or all tools.
I'm going to choose to reset all tools
and say okay in this dialogue box,
and sure enough the width and height
that were populating these fields
for the crop tool are now gone,
and in fact all of the options for all tools
have now been set back to their defaults.
One more thing I'd like to show you about
the tool box is that at the bottom of the tool box,
we have two color boxes.
Whatever color is showing in this foreground color box
is the color that will be used by any
of the tools in Elements Editor that use color.
For example, we have a brush tool here
that paints with color, and under that
we have a pencil tool that also uses color.
We have a gradient tool that uses both
what's in the foreground color box and
the color in the background color box, and
we have type tools that use color and so on.
So, I want to quickly show you a couple of ways to change the color
in the foreground color box.
The first and easiest way is to click
on the eye-dropper tool here,
and then if you have an image open,
to click in the image on a color
that you would like to use; so I'll click on this yellow,
and you can see the foreground color box picked up that color,
and now if I were to select a tool
like the paint brush and
paint something here on the wall,
it would use that color yellow.
Another way to change the foreground color
is to click on the foreground color box
and that opens the color picker.
Here in the color picker I can move the slider
in the middle to a different hue, perhaps blue,
and then is this large field on the left,
I'll pick a blue shade.
This or this or this, and as I choose different
shades, they appear here in this square box.
I'll click okay, and notice that the foreground
color box is now blue, and if I were to draw
in this image, I'd now be drawing with blue.
Notice that the paint brush has a brush tip.
You see it here as a circle
with a cross in the center.
In fact many of the tools in the tool box
have brush tips.
Everything from the eraser tool
to the clone-stamp tool, which
is used to hide content in your photos,
to the smart-brush tool, a new interesting tool that we'll explore in another movie,
to the healing and spot-healing brush tools
here and other tools as well
have a brush-tip size.
I'd like to show you how you can change the size of the brush tip in the most efficient way,
and to do that I'm going to select another tool;
one that you'll often use as photographers and
that is the spot-healing brush tool right here.
What the spot-healing brush tool does
is cover up unwanted elements in a photo
by copying and pasting pixels from nearby
in the photo and blending those pixels in
to the area you're trying cover up.
Let me show you how it works:
I'm going to try to get rid of this thermostat on the wall here.
In order to do so I have to change my brush tip
so that it is big enough to cover this entire thermostat, and right now it isn't.
So you might think that the best way to change this brush size
would be to go up to the options bar and
look for an option about brush size, and indeed there is one here.
You can see this particular brush is 13 pixels,
and you might click here and try to move this
slider and pick some other number,
but the problem with doing that is you
have no idea how big a brush tip your choice is going to give you.
So you're kind of working blind when you do this.
Another possible way might be to click on this field to the left of the size field
which shows some preset brushes and their sizes,
and you could try to select something here,
but, again, these are meaningless sizes
until you get the brush tip back
down into the image.
So, let me show you a better way to do this.
I'm actually going to choose a small brush tip here, and I'll come in
and I think my brush tip now is way too small
to cover that thermostat.
So, here's what I'm going to do, and this is the take home point,
I'm going to press the right bracket key on my keyboard which is two keys away
from the "P" key, and as I press
that right bracket key, you can see my brush tip
getting bigger until it is big enough
to cover that thermostat, and now when I click on the thermostat,
like magic it disappears.
If you want to make your brush tip smaller, then
you click the left bracket key on your keyboard, right next to the "P" key.
So, those are some productivity enhancing tips for using tools in Photoshop Elements.
Now there's no need to memorize all your tools,
but it is important to know how to make your tools work efficiently
because that will save you time and effort
as you work on your photos in full edit mode of the editor.
[Watch Photoshop Elements 7 Essential Training at www.lynda.com/pse7]
