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Basic image editing with Adobe Photoshop CS5
Dave Klein
I'm not a professional photographer, and I have no aspirations
to be. Like many people, I use my phone for the majority of the shots I
take. That's what inspired me to write this article on basic image
editing. We all experience similar problems with our photos, and for
those moments that deserve more than the camera delivered, we can turn
to Adobe Photoshop to quickly bring dull images back to life.
All the edits you make in Camera Raw are stored back inside the original image metadata, so when you open the image again in Camera Raw in the future, all your edits can be adjusted or removed completely to return the image to its original state. Even image crops and touch-ups can be reversed.
In the Photoshop environment, you can make nondestructive changes to your images using adjustment layers (as well as using Smart Objects). However, most of the other changes you make in Photoshop result in permanent changes to the image structure. That's not a bad thing. After all, Photoshop is the world-standard tool for altering pixels, and that's why we use it.
But before you decide, let me show you my basic image-editing workflow using a picture I took using my phone's camera on a morning bike ride in Boulder, Colorado (see Figure 1).
Nondestructive image editing
Photoshop provides several ways to edit images without making changes to the underlying data of the original image, which is known as nondestructive editing. One such way is the Camera Raw environment. Many people are either completely unaware of the Camera Raw editing environment in Photoshop, or they wrongly assume that using Camera Raw requires images to be shot in the RAW format. But you can indeed edit the JPEG files from your camera in Camera Raw, and once you do, you will see how powerful and intuitive it is.All the edits you make in Camera Raw are stored back inside the original image metadata, so when you open the image again in Camera Raw in the future, all your edits can be adjusted or removed completely to return the image to its original state. Even image crops and touch-ups can be reversed.
In the Photoshop environment, you can make nondestructive changes to your images using adjustment layers (as well as using Smart Objects). However, most of the other changes you make in Photoshop result in permanent changes to the image structure. That's not a bad thing. After all, Photoshop is the world-standard tool for altering pixels, and that's why we use it.
Developing a workflow
We all have our own way of doing things, and I encourage you to develop your own photo-editing workflow. I make most of my basic image adjustments in Camera Raw. Then I move to Photoshop for touch-ups and more. Some people think this workflow is backwards, so feel free to reverse it if that's what you prefer. I start in Camera Raw because most of the time that is all I need.But before you decide, let me show you my basic image-editing workflow using a picture I took using my phone's camera on a morning bike ride in Boulder, Colorado (see Figure 1).
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