Product Details
Adobe Photoshop Elements 8 (PC DVD)

Adobe Photoshop Elements 8 (PC DVD)
From Adobe Systems Inc.

List Price: £75.81
Price: £55.41 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery. Details

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Product Description

Adobe Photoshop Elements 8 combines power and simplicity so you can easily tell amazing stories with your photos. Bring all your photos and video clips together in one convenient place where you can easily find, view, and manage them, and then dive right into a full range of creative activities. Make your photos look extraordinary with editing options that let you recompose photos to any size while keeping key subjects intact combine multiple exposures into a single, perfectly lit shot and quickly preview a range of adjustments before choosing the perfect one. And share your stories in unique photo books, scrapbook pages, slide shows, and interactive online experiences.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #5 in Software
  • Brand: Adobe Systems Inc.
  • Released on: 2009-09-29
  • Platforms: Windows Vista, Windows XP
  • Format: DVD-ROM
  • Original language: English
  • Subtitled in: English
  • Dimensions: .57 pounds

Editorial Reviews

Manufacturer's Description

Adobe Photoshop Elements 8--Make ordinary photos extraordinary

Make magic with your photos, easily manage all your images and share your favourite shots online or in print with Adobe Photoshop Elements 8 software. The latest version of this best-selling consumer photo-editing software combines powerful performance with simplicity of use, making it easy to tell amazing stories with your photos. Bring all your photos and video clips together in one convenient place where you can easily find, view and manage them, and then dive right into a full range of creative activities. Amazing new features include:

Enhance your photos with bluer skies or whiter teeth in seconds.

  • Recompose photos to any size without distortion
  • People Recognition--instantly find photos featuring specific people
  • Photomerge Exposure--combine several shots into the perfect picture
  • Auto-Analyzer-- Quickly find your best photos
Experience the ultimate media management hub--Bring all your photos and video clips together in one convenient place, and easily find your best stuff fast.

Go from flawed to phenomenal in seconds--Get just the photo fixes you’re looking for with one-step shortcuts that whiten teeth and make skies a vibrant blue. And now in Photoshop Elements 8, when you perform one-step photo adjustments--including colour, contrast, and lighting--you can quickly choose the best result from a group of adjustment previews.

Dramatically transform your photos with easy-to-use options--Convert your colour originals to elegant black-and-whites, or use colour curves adjustments to get the perfect exposure.

Step-by-step assistance--Want to touch up a scratch? Create a scrapbook page? Add artistic effects that make a photo look like a pencil sketch? Get help with key steps to get the results you want fast.

Create a well exposed photo from several differently exposed shots of the same scene with Photomerge Exposure.



Easily create the perfect photo--Take advantage of amazing Adobe Photomerge technology to easily remove distracting elements from photos in just a few clicks, create perfect group shots and seamless panoramas, and combine elements of different faces for entertaining results.

Share experiences in fresh, exciting ways on the web--Showcase your photos in one-of-a-kind Online Albums with your choice of animated templates, including all-new options for sharing photos and videos together. Adobe Flash technology lets viewers interact with your photos.

Show off your creativity with flexible layouts--Make amazing printed photo creations, including scrapbook pages, photo books and cards, that you can customise to get exactly the look you envision. Get fun, fresh looks with new artwork and templates.


Top new benefits of Adobe Photoshop Elements 8

People Recognition automatically identifies the people in your photos.


Recompose photos to any size without distortion--Ever wanted to change the size or orientation of a photo to fit a certain frame? Now you can quickly resize--even going from landscape to portrait or vice versa--without distorting key subjects like people or buildings.

Get the best exposure--Want to capture all the details in a scene that includes light and dark areas? Snap one photo with flash on and one with flash off, and Photomerge Exposure will combine the shots into a single, perfectly lit photo.

Quickly find your best photos--No need to click through dozens or hundreds of shots to find the good ones. The Auto-Analyzer automatically tags your media so you can easily find your most interesting, highest quality photos and video footage.

People Recognition--find specific people in a flash--Quickly find photos that feature specific friends or family members thanks to People Recognition, which automatically identifies the people in your photos.

Get the big picture--See the full effect of your photos and video clips from within the Organiser with new full-screen previews, which let you make quick edits to photos while viewing them.

Give your creations fresh looks--Experiment with new artwork and templates to give your printed creations fun and stylish new looks.

Enjoy support for Windows 7--Take advantage of support for the new Windows 7 platform and the hands-on capabilities of Windows Touch technology.


Customer Reviews

The market leading home photo-editor - Not an essential upgrade for v7 users though4
So what does Elements 8 offer over Elements 7? Well there's the `resize' tool that `resizes' your photos via a mouse drag but keeps all the key features, e.g. people and buildings, at the correct proportions. There's also an extension to the PhotoMerge's `combine elements from a sequence of photos', where you can add the face of people lit up by a flash to the background of another where the exposure's made the background far brighter, i.e. ideal for night shots. You could already do this PhotoMerge stuff, like drop in a smiley face over from another photo in the sequence, with Elements 7, and to be honest the old shadow/highlight command works as well in many cases. Plus all these semi-automatic editing features are totally reliant on you taking a sequence of fairly identical photos from exactly the same perspective, move the camera too much and the PhotoMerges won't work that well.

Elements 8 also adds in more complex database features, where the auto-database now analyses every photo and grades it, so that good ones can be quickly found. Plus there's image recognition, where say all the photos of your son can be located, Adobe Bridge style [and it works better than PhotoShops CS4's version]. Trouble is, like Adobe Bridge, this all takes a while to do, which can be a little irritating, so I prefer to stick to logical folder names instead. That said, within the photo-organiser you can now quick-edit images fast while viewing them and you can sync your photo collection across PCs to ensure the same photos are on all of them [useful for backup protection].

Plus some of the one step `teeth whitening' and `Sky more blue' tools have been streamlined to make colour, contrast and lighting adjustments even quicker [actually useful for old faded slide scans or to give Great Aunt Maud a fake tan and make her look ridiculous . As with Elements 7, you also get the `free' 2Gb of on-line storage to `protect your precious photos' [just not that many of them], although this increases to 20Gb for those buying the more expensive `Plus' version of Elements 8, that also offers artwork scrapbook features, Serif Digital Scrapbook Artist style [however Elements 8 Plus is only available in the US]. And that's about it, new features wise.

And all the old Element 7's tools are there as well. For editing you have a set of 'quickfix' options or you can load the full image editor for greater manual control: such as adjust sharpness, correct camera distortion, levels, hue and skin colour. Naturally you have standard tools like crop and adjust image size (pixels) as well. Plus there are step-through guides [guided edit] to help you get there. The software will also integrate with scanners twain interfaces if you are into scanning film, and the Fill Light [shadow/highlight] tool is pretty essential for bringing out detail in shadows from any slide/negative scan. Plus Elements can handle large RAW camera images, although I use TIFF/jpg (Elements can save in any common image format). Fortunately the horrible dark grey interface from Elements 7 can now be modified [lightened] in preferences, although you can still have trouble working out which photo window is active. Also, once installed, be sure to keep Elements 8 updated with the latest Adobe patches as software of this type can be very buggy on first release.

System requirements are actually lower than Elements 7 [if you are a rather patient sort]: CD drive, 1Gb system RAM, XP, Vista or Windows 7, 1.6GHz processor, 2Gb hard drive space, and a Direct-X 9 16-bit graphics card [and Adobe installers can reject systems that don't meet the minimum spec]. Those with a modern multi-core PC and 4Gb system RAM will find the program far more responsive though. Elements 8 perhaps isn't a crucial upgrade from Elements 7 or even 6, but for new home users, or those with older versions, it's very powerful photo editing and image database software from the market leaders. The new `PhotoMerge Exposure' tool is touted as the 'killer app' for those considering upgrading, but it is little more than Elements 6's old PhotoMerge Group application and it requires that series of photos where one has the background free to copy across.

Adobe Elements 8 has only two real competitors at the price: Paint Shop Pro X2 and Serif PhotoPlus X3. Both these programs are also excellent and worthy of consideration, with PhotoPlus's strength being it's about as powerful but rather cheaper to buy and upgrade. Likewise Corel Paint Shop pro X2 occasionally offers a bit more than Elements [layer masks, and curves], is also cheaper and a tad easier to use, although it can be buggy [not Adobe's strong point on first version release either - so install those patches]. Professional users and some SLR enthusiasts will still head towards Adobe's semi-automated PhotoShop Lightroom 2.0 and the fantastically expensive Adobe Photoshop CS4 Extended, although even at work we have Adobe Elements 7/8 on a few imaging workstations for casual users, where the high cost of PhotoShop CS4 Extended simply isn't justified. That said experienced Photoshop CS4 users will rapidly find Elements 8 lacking many key features they are used to [if you really want to significantly upgrade Photoshop Elements 7, then Photoshop CS4 Extended is certainly that]. Be warned though Photoshop CS4 users won't find Elements 8 immediately easy to use, it's evolved into a very different program and in particular it can take quite a while to realise the CS4 tool you are looking for in Elements 8 simply doesn't exist.

Whether all this is worth the very high upgrade prices for Adobe Elements 7 users is rather debateable, although with a large educational users discount the price becomes more tempting [for schoolkids/teachers/students]. Plus you can buy Photoshop Elements 8 as a cheap double pack with the excellent Adobe Premiere Elements 8 [video editing] - and this also attracts an educational discount

Pointless Upgrade... if you already have v7.002
It gives me no pleasure to state that I've had Photoshop Elements v8 for around 3 weeks now and I'm not impressed. As a photo processing package Adobe Imaging software is generally considered unbeatable. Photoshop Elements software is very powerful tool at a very affordable price. However if you already have Elements v7 then v8 can only be justified only if you are upgrading from a much earlier version, say v4 or 5. Installed on my computer I have had versions 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 and now v8. Version 5 & 6 being the best. Version 7 was justifiable as it does have several new tools that were very helpful and your upgrade cash could be warranted. This latest and newest v8 package however is purely cosmetic. The new Recompose Tool being very gimmicky, as is the Organizer. Yes it will draw in a photo from landscape mode to a portrait photo providing that there is plain background, like grass or sand etc immediately behind the prime objects in your photo. Try reducing your photo however with a building(s), roads, cars or even furniture immediately behind the prime objects and the results are a nonsense. The new released v8.00 videos only show very plain backgrounds when presenting this new feature..... (I wonder why!!) I'm actually extremely disappointed with this new version of Elements 8. It is so near to v7 as to be almost a direct copy. Absolute and complete waste of money to upgrade if you already have v7 as I've already stated. If Adobe keep bringing out these rather bland gimmicky ongoing yearly upgrades to Photoshop Elements just to simply bring in extra cash then I suspect that the people will soon begin to cotton on to this scam. Better to do away with Elements altogether and reduce the cost of `big brother' Photoshop CS4 from its ridiculously expensive purchase price. That way at least we would be on the same playing field. These recent yearly (especially this year) pointless cosmetic upgrades are beginning to become a bore. Regretfully I did get sucked in by all the hype and have wasted my cash on this senseless upgrade which I see no point in keeping on my HDD taking up space which otherwise could be put to better use. It will be removed very very shortly, I guarantee it. All IMHO of coarse.

Photoshop for dummies5
Over the years I've used Elements 2 and 4 (still have 4 on my laptop actually) and they have served me well. If you want in depth editing, then this won't really be the product you want, and if you have £600 floating about I'd highly recommend going down the Photoshop CS route.

This being said, Elements 8 is absolutely fantastic. The interface took me a few minutes to get used to (which in itself is good as a new product normally requires hours of rummaging around) and the 3 settings you have at a click makes editing photos an absolute snap. The guided mode is the best for immediate no frills editing, which is probably what you'll use most if you are using a decent and properly set up dSLR, as you'll generally only need simple dust removal, flares, etc cleaning up.

For this money, I'd say BUY IT NOW.