Wednesday, January 3, 2007

Photo editing steps

There are countless ways to enhance an image by editing, known as post-processing. What follows are some basic, most frequently used steps to process digital images.

Always work on a duplicate of an original image. If you goof along the way, just make another copy of the original and start editing again.

Some images need little, if any, post-processing prior to printing. However the same photo may need enhancing if it will be displayed on a website.

Don't over editing as an image can lose detail and become unnatural looking.
Six basic photo editing steps

1. Open photo via the image editing software Open menu
2. Flip the image if it's orientation needs to be changed
3. Crop - remove unwanted portions of a photo if desired; crop to a specific aspect ratio (eg. 4x6", 8x10")
4. Resize - make a photo larger or smaller, most typically smaller. Its height and width change proportionally if the "Constrain" or "Keep Aspect Ratio" setting is enabled.
5. Enhance image by adjusting its brightness and contrast, sharpenig it if an image looks "soft," or correct a color cast to make an image have more true-to-life colors
6. Save an image

For printing - Save your image as a TIFF, Bitmap or high-quality jpeg (jpg).

For the web - Save a photo as a jpeg. You will be given options to adjust compression level. If compression is set too low, the image will degrade in visual quality. If set too high, a photo can take too long to load into a web browser.

During any step in the editing process, if you do not like a change you made, click the "undo" command.

For more sophisticated post-processing you should use a photo editing program that has layering capabilities.