![]() ![]() They are located just below the color correction panel. Quick Effects - you can also apply some color effects to the photo. You should move the sliders to the sides and see what happens. It is managed according to the classic Adobe scheme. The drawback is that you cannot work with several photos at the same time, for example, rotate them.Ĭolor correction - there is a color correction menu on the right. Organizing photos - you will find the most necessary tools for quick viewing or rotating images below. I believe that there is nothing superfluous there - Quick Selection, Eye Tool, Whiten Tool, Straighten Tool, Text, and Spot Healing Brush. Tools – everything you need for basic work with the photo is on the left. It is very clear how and where all the buttons are located. There are practically no complaints about the interface itself. The design of Photoshop Elements 2023 interface remained far in 2005 when CS2 was just released. But when I opened Photoshop Elements, I felt this spirit of the 2000s, when all the programs were bright, colorful and each icon was a separate picture with many details. I'm used to the fact that modern programs look dark, have minimalistic icons and a hidden interface. I recommend paying your attention to Photoshop Elements 2023. If I am not editing the image, how come I can save my edited work? Why does it not give me the option of continuing to edit in Guided? I tried to continue editing in Expert, but have no idea why there are a string of irrelevant pictures down the right hand side of the screen, can I get rid of them as it would enable the picture I am editing to occupy a greater area of the screen? Also when I have edited in expert, why do I not get the option to save my work, but have to return to quick or guided mode to save an edit? It makes no sense to me.If you don’t want to look for a simpler picture editor or trust only Adobe, then pay attention to the Elements series, I call it “nothing needless”. This suggests that I am editing the image I am seeing which contradicts what you suggested. Once I have selected a photo and edited a parameter in guided mode, I only have options to save or continue editing in Quick or Expert. Regarding the guided edits, I definitely don’t get their purpose and still don’t after your explanation. I didn’t even know there were 2 view options. It’s definitely not intuitive and no help or information appears when you hover the mouse over the instruction. I would never have guessed that the ‘details’ button changed the display from adaptive to detailed, and after reading your reply I only found it because you mentioned Ctrl D as a switch. There were several options such as ‘view all’ that were more intuitive to achieve my aim. I had previously looked into all the drop down menus to try and find how to display a collapsed stack. After your effect has been achieved, you are prompted to open in the expert mode, where you can continue to process the resulting layered file with all the expert tools. The flexibility is there: you are learning the tools you have to use, the order in which you apply those successive tools, which helps you to process the same effects in the 'expert' mode. This requires that you have your own pictures opened, and then that you follow the required editing steps. You are not working on the images you are seeing, you are only selecting a guided edit. First, there are many of them and the images which are displayed are just working as animated menu icons to choose your effect. ![]() ![]() That works in both types of view.Ģ - A number of old users don't get the purpose of the guided edits. You are probably used the 'detailed' view you can choose from the 'view' menu or with the shortcut Ctrl D to switch modes.Īnyway, you can still use the right click option on the selected thumbnail to open the drop down menu with the options for stacks and version sets. All the browsing space shows only the thumbnails side by side without any space around the thumbnails to show the date and file name. 1 - My guess is that you are in the 'adaptative view' of your thumbnails. ![]()
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