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Adobe Photoshop Elements 7

List Price: $99.99
Discount Price: $71.00
Buy now

Platform: Windows XP, Windows Vista
Brand: Adobe
Binding: CD-ROM
Release Date: 2008-10-13

Features:

  • Stay connected with your favorite people and memories with new Photoshop.com membership
  • Make ordinary photos extraordinary with easy-to-use editing tools
  • Share your stories in beautiful, personalized creations for print and web
  • Easily find and view all your photos
  • Share your photos in fun, interactive ways with invitation-only Online Albums

Customer Reviews:

Lots to Learn! [Posted on 2008-11-01]
RATING = 1 STAR as delivered / 4 STARS with supplemental book from the library!!!!

I'm new to Photoshop Elements. I really need a good digital photo editor because my pictures don't always turn out. I was going to order PSE6 and then saw PSE7 was coming out in October so I pre-ordered PSE7 on Amazon.

When I first installed this program I thought it was REALLY, REALLY slow to use, and there is really no documentation provided on how to use it. CRAZY! I figured out how to do basic things as best I could and tried figuring out how to get help from Adobe's website - just generally not intuitive.

Well - being resourceful and not ready to give up I got Photoshop Elements for Dummies from the library. I'm currently on Page 18, and I'm finally getting it - It's a miracle. There are things that you would NEVER figure out on your own (ex: hover and blue text will appear and you can click on the blue text to get specific help for that functionality!!!!)

My advice - buy the software and then ahold of some good documentation that will help you figure out how to use this!!!


Me likes [Posted on 2008-11-03]
The upgrade from 6 to 7 is arguable, but buying 7 has inspired me to learn more and more about the abilities of elements 7. There's a lot of tutorials out there helping me with (what I consider)a big learning curve.

I have become addicted. This is the best thing since sliced bread.

It's better than a video game. You can do some very cool stuff. This is challenging my imagination.

If you don't have photoshop...get it. It is not a perfect program. It seems demanding of your computer. Thats because some major computing is going on, and so far, I have figured out a way to make everything work as designed.

Because it's not perfect, it gets 4 stars. Did I say, get it? Yeah, I did.


The question isn't if this is a good upgrade but if this is a good product! [Posted on 2008-11-07]
This is an excellent product for home use. My HP photo editing software was no good on a VISTA 64-bit system. We take a lot of digitial photos and need an easy editing program. This is one of the more powerful and is not very hard to learn. You will find all the standard "home editing" items and some nice additional features.
Instalation was no problem, the system runs well and is not unusually hard to use. You will need a training book! The internal documentaion is lacking and the screens can be daunting. My choice was the "Teach Yourself Visually" book. It isn't expensive and has all that I want and need.
Photoshop is a very poweful poduct. This is for home use and you shouldn't expect professional features. Like any software, you have a learning curve. The results are worth the effort. This is a product that is supported by a major company and one that you will be able to use for yesrs aand years.


Lucky Number Seven: many fun features in PSE V.7 [Posted on 2008-11-10]
Some major and not-so-major changes to Photoshop Elements here in Version 7. Photoshop Elements is the almost-grownup version of Photoshop. For 90-plus percent of users, PSE has all you need to edit photographs, make digital art. Add in Photoshop Premiere Elements and handle videos, too.

There are so many new features in version 7. One that stands out is the new "guided edit." If you are impatient to try out all the ways to modify a photo, you can learn then quickly using a guided edit. The try-it buttons lead you through a sequence of filters and adjustments (not always explaining them in detail, however) and you can get a relatively good result. For tweaking "your way", you'll have to learn the underlying techniques but for an on-the-fly method, this is a handy tool and a great way to dip into the huge array of tools. But some of the new guided edits won't help you learn how to do it on your own as they are script-based and some of these newfangled tricks only show up in guided edit, nowhere else.

For those that use the selection brushes (a magic tool that selects similar color areas to allow you to recolor, delete or otherwise modify sections of pictures) there is now the ability to modify the selection with a plus-minus feature that is included in the brush control, not as a separate brush as in previous versions. I use the selection brush a lot to modify photos for visualizing paintings, and this is a nice improvement.

The help has been greatly expanded; not only is the Adobe reader-based help available, but there is a new beta community-based (wiki-style) help as well.

The photographic editing has been greatly enhanced for ease of use. For example, there are quick fixes, remove elements (dust, red glowing zombie eyes, poles sticking up in back of heads) and other desirable cures for photo problems. There are project guides for making artwork with an eye to the scrapbooking hobbyist. There is an improved photomerge feature for group shots (that's handy.)

I was certainly happy with the new text search box, which lets you search your for pictures by keywords, time, data, camera, and caption. If you've lost a picture and it's somewhere buried in your folders, you know how useful this can be.

You can now back up your photos online, join a Photoshop community and download more easily to cell phones. Photoshop.com membership offers a lot of ways to share photos, including one I found intriguing; if you keep your photos on your desktop and travel with a laptop, you can access the server at Photoshop.com and have access to photos you don't have with you. (Conversely, I can think of a case when I was traveling in a remote place and was downloading photos to the laptop. I would have appreciated an easy way to upload them all somewhere else for safekeeping.) There are also album templates for online sharing, similar to Flickr and Photobucket. The online part of PSE is really the biggest addition to the new version. While I did find a lot of the editing slicker in the revamped organizer, the basic program is very much the same.

Why should you bother with Photoshop.com if you use other online photo management systems? Existing users and new ones get free, basic membership plans with 2GB of storage. The 'Plus' plan is sold on its own for $50 per year or bundled with the desktop software for $140 and has 20GB of space and you can also store videos. The online membership allows you to sync with some applications in PSE7 and to do phone picture management. Right now, the phone feature is uploading and sharing, but in future, there may be a mobile version for more photo manipulation. (I use my cell phone just for calls and the occasional peep at the news; apparently phones are becoming pretty advanced--when they have one that dispenses a decent espresso, I'll think about it.)

In summary: if you are a new user to Photoshop Elements, there are many enhancements for communication and sharing as well as better help. If you are a current user, you might want to think if you need the latest bells and whistles. If you are a home-based PSE user, there might not be enough to tempt you. But if you share a lot of pictures and want a faster way to do some of the photo manipulation, PSE7 could be great for you. Remember, if you want macros (scripts of frequently-used sequence of keystrokes) and if you need to access information on PANTONE, CMYK and other printer's color functions, Photoshop Creative Suite --the original full program, is what you need to use.


Give it a chance, it is better than stated [Posted on 2008-11-11]
First, let me say for the many that do not know. Adobe Photoshop elements 6 as well as every other earlier version DOES have a manual. It just doesn't come with it, due to the fact that it would cause the box to weigh a ton considering it has over 400 pages... however it can be found in PDF format at [...]
Adobe is still processing the user guide for PSE7 and it should be out soon. Since PSE6 in essentially the same as PSE7, you can use the user guide for it until the version 7 guide is published.
I do not own PSE7 yet, but I have used PSE6 and I am currently using the trial version of PSE7. I am an advanced photoshop user and I use this software on a daily basis for my photography edits and digital photo restoration. I think the software is a little slower than version 6 but overall it is great and very useful for a photographer on a budget. It also has some added backgrounds, templates, graphics and framing options that are easy to use for the digital scrapbooking enthusiasts.
If you are upgrading there may be some things that you do not like, but they aren't enough to stop you from upgrading. If you are a new PSE user then you won't know the difference and won't be dissapointed. Happy Photoshopping!!


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