Product Details
Adobe Photoshop Elements 5 (PC)

Adobe Photoshop Elements 5 (PC)
From Adobe Systems Inc.

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Product Description

Bring out the best in your photos Adobe Photoshop Elements 5.0 software combines power and simplicityso you can do more with your photos. Instantly fix flaws or adjustcolour and lighting with new advanced controls. Quickly drop yourphotos into custo


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #215 in Software
  • Brand: Adobe Systems Inc.
  • Released on: 2006-10-06
  • Platforms: Windows XP, Windows XP Professional
  • Dimensions: 1.54 pounds

Editorial Reviews

Computer Shopper
This is a stonking upgrade to an excellent package, and superb value

PC Pro
Best-of-breed photo management, editing and sharing with great usability and value

Manufacturer's Description
Adobe Photoshop Elements 5.0 software combines power and simplicity so you can do more with your photos. This is a comprehensive software package that addresses an incredible array of tasks related to digital photography: downloading, organization, automatic editing, advanced editing, creativity templates, sharing photos, and even archiving. Photoshop Elements 5.0 is a soup-to-nuts digital photography solution based on the technology of Adobe Photoshop, the industry standard for professional-quality photo editing.

Professional-Quality Editing Made Easy
Photoshop Elements is designed to be easy to use; you can fix photos in a snap with intelligent features that automatically correct skin tone, lighting, colour, and contrast. Even see red eye removed automatically as you download photos.

More experienced users can take advantage of Photoshop Elements' advanced tools. These tools let you make adjustments to colour, lighting, exposure, brightness, and contrast. The new Adjust Colour Curves controls make it even easier to fine-tune colour, brightness, and contrast. Other advanced innovations include the Healing Brush for removing wrinkles and unwanted objects, the Spot Healing Brush for getting rid of dust and scratches in old photos, and Shadow/Highlight for lightening shadows and reducing the glare of highlights.

Give your colour originals a dramatic, elegant look by turning them into rich black-and-white photos by selecting from an array of variation samples. Easily correct camera lens distortion at photo edges and keystone effects that exaggerate perspective. Get crisper-looking photos by sharpening blurred edges, even remove blurring caused by low-light conditions.

Photoshop Elements' precise selection tools and layering abilities allow you to combine elements from different photos to create fun composites. Quickly separate an object from its background even in complex, textured areas and instantly remove rough edges, and then combine it with another photo to create a new scene.

With support for RAW image files and many new camera models, Photoshop Elements 5.0 you the highest-quality image-editing results.

Creativity and sharing
Photoshop Elements' creativity tools let you present your photos in creative, entertaining ways. Use flexible layout options as a starting point for your creations: choose a blank slate, basic frameworks, or professionally designed themes. Create memorable keepsakes in so many ways: Create custom slide shows, cards, album pages, CD and DVD covers, scrapbook layouts, photo books, prints, Flipbooks, and much more. Take advantage of Flash technology to share your photos in interactive web galleries and animate your photos with a choice of themes, such as a spinning carousel, to provide an interactive viewing experience.

With drag-and-drop simplicity, you can drop photos into flexible layouts, drag to resize images, and move photos anywhere on the page with ease. Customize all of the elements of your chosen layout. Adjust layout colours to better complement your photos; add new graphical elements to enhance or personalize the theme; and even use your own photos and art as backgrounds or textures on which to base new layouts.

Set off your photos with more than 100 included frames, from traditional to elegant to avant-garde.

Enjoy integrated access to online services, such as sharing photos and photo creations on the Web, and ordering prints and hardbound photo books--all from within Photoshop Elements. Easily upload your photos to CEIVA digital receivers that automatically receive and display new photos daily.

Photoshop Elements 5.0 also adds the Map view, so you can find photos by the locations where they were taken. Simply drag photos to any location in the new Map view, which is tied to online satellite views. Even upload your Map view to the web, for easy sharing with friends and family.

Great Tools for Downloading, Organization, and Archiving
In addition to the powerful image-editing and creativity tools, Elements 5.0 includes great tools for downloading, organization, and archiving your photos.

The enhanced Photo Downloader grabs photos from your digital camera and mobile phone in a snap, and it also can clear the camera card for you. Organize photos more easily by automatically grouping and tagging photos as you download based on the time they were taken or on an event. Folder names are automatically created with a matching tag so you can easily find these groups of photos later. Photoshop Elements can find multiple photos of similar shots and automatically group them together, and you can choose the best shot as the thumbnail for easy viewing.

Easily organize your photos and video clips with visual tagging options that let you categorize by people, places, or events. Then view in a variety of ways, including by tag, on a timeline, and in a calendar view. You can also quickly find and view all the previously saved versions of a photo by simply clicking to expand its Version Set in the Organizer.


Customer Reviews

If you've got a digital camera, you need to buy this5
Photoshop Elements 5 is really two packages in one: a picture organiser, and a sophisticated photo editor.

Getting your pictures into Photoshop is a matter of plugging your memory card, or the camera itself, into your PC, and Photoshop imports them automatically. While doing this, it recognises similarities between pictures and makes `stacks' of similar looking pictures. This is not particularly successful because it fails to stack pictures of the same subject taken at different zoom levels, different orientations (portrait or landscape) and so on. Adobe perhaps needs to work on this. More successfully, Photoshop automatically recognises red eyes and corrects them before you even touch the pictures. You can also do this by hand once the pictures are in.

The importing software recognises most image formats, including RAW formats for most cameras. You probably won't need to use the picture-grabbing software that came with your camera.

Once the pictures are in the organiser, you have many ways of viewing them, by filename / folder location, date and time, and even by geographic location, since Photoshop lets you pin your pictures to a world map. A nice touch for globetrotters or international agents. The organizer also lets you `tag' pictures with key words like people's names, type of subject, and so on. Useful but not essential, unless you have tons of pictures that you want to search by picture content as opposed to just the date they were taken. Additionally, a couple of clicks will bring up the picture info showing the camera setting you used like aperture size, shutter speed, white balance settings and suchlike.

The really impressive and magical part of Photoshop is the magnificent photo editor, for which no hyperbole would be unjustified. From the organizer, you can call up two editing screens - the quick fix editor, and the full editor.

Most basic corrections can be made via the quick fix screen. These include contrast, sharpness, lighting (darken highlights, lighten shadows), and colour (saturation, colour temperature, green vs. pink tint). Editing is achieved very, very simply using slider controls. You can undo every step in your edit, or revert to the original picture in a single click. There is also a `smart fix' control that will do the whole lot for you in one go. Despite my scepticism, this function works very well indeed. The great majority of pictures can be improved on the quick fix screen in a matter of seconds.

The most enchanting part of Photoshop though is the full editor. Here, tons of point and click tools will apply blur, enrich colours in selected parts of pictures, smooth out blemishes (a VERY clever and useful tool), and level skewed horizons. The menus are mind bogglingly deep, with each option having several sub-options. You can fine-tune colour, lighting and contrast to your hearts content using very accessible colour / brightness curves, and even perk up skin tones. Don't like that picture of you in a green shirt? Change it to a blue shirt, or any other colour you like. Photoshop makes these alterations amazingly convincingly if you take a bit of time over your pictures. It also makes crisp black-and-white pictures with presets for portraits, landscapes, newspaper-style greyscales, etc. All these presets, like most everything else in Photoshop, can be tweaked by the user.

The most fun is to be had in the `Filters' menu. This includes a rich range of photographic filters such as solid colours and gradients, which can be fine-tuned in terms of the tint and density. The only filter you will need to attach to you camera will be a polarizer, for which there is no simulator in Photoshop. There are also many brush, texture, blur, smudge and other artistic and darkroom effects to make your pictures look like they're out of a magazine.

My absolute favourite has to be the Camera Distortion filter, which lets you correct curvature at the edge of the picture when you've used a wide lens, and pinch-in the `bulge' you sometimes get with zooms. This is a splendidly simple process: you tilt the picture to straighten uprights, adjust the bulge / pincushion effect, lighten the lens vignette effect if it's visible, re-crop the white bits out of the picture, and the job's done, all with a few sweeps of the mouse.

After all this playing about, Photoshop will clean up the speckles, noise and jpeg artefacts that sneak in when you take digital pictures. Far from looking phoney or `touched up' after using Photoshop, the pictures look more natural, more like the eye saw the scene, than they did when they came out of the camera. Unless of course you WANT your pictures to look like brass rubbings viewed through frosted glass, which it can also do!

Editing pictures is easy and absorbing with Photoshop. It enhances your enjoyment of your pictures and the whole process of photography, as well as perhaps making you more aware of how to compose and frame your shots for the next shoot. It is dangerously easy to spend hours tinkering with your pictures on Photoshop!

And still there's more. You can make slide shows or interactive albums and burn them to video disks or e-mail them to your friends. You can even get prints if you want (how quaint).

The only omission I've found so far is that there's no easy way to calibrate your monitor brightness and colours to the prints you get from your selected printer / developer. While this can be done using the monitor hardware settings, it's a pain to do it like this, and it surely wouldn't have been too much trouble for Adobe to have included some screen brightness and colour setting options. At present the only way I can compensate for this is to make the on-screen images a tad brighter, because the prints come out a bit darker. Also, printed documentation is sparse, although the Help pages are extensive and user-friendly.

Overall though, this is a superb package. It's comprehensive, very easy to use, and good value for money given the huge number of things it can do. If you've got a digital camera, you need this software.

For the price, close to perfect4
An ex pro photographer, digital for 6 years, I have tried many editing software programs.
Up till now for the price Paintshop Pro was hard to beat, it still is very good software for the price.
My first trip into Elements and I am impressed, the browser is probably worth the money on it's own, but you have a full blown editor that can do practically everything you are likely to wish for. It's not perfect, because it can be slow to work/respond at times, running on a Pentium 3.0ghz with 1gb ram, there are times it's a little frustrating, but that is probably it's only achilles heel.
One big advantage is the amount of information, books, magazines, articles on the internet that all relate to photoshop elements, helping you to learn even more neat editing tips and tricks.
I would recomend this software to any digital camera user, just make sure your computer is not too old and slow or you may find you are tapping your fingers too much.

Get it, use it, you won't regret it ... 5
... I am essentially a nerdy techy, but not necessarily massively savvy with photo editing software. Until recently I have always 'fought' with the more complex versions of Photoshop (CS, CS2), achieving mediocre results.
A few days ago I tried Elements 5.
Wow ... what took me an hour to achieve elsewhere, I can do here in a matter of minutes (and it looks better with Elements than my attempts with CS2).
Be warned though ... this is not noddyland stuff though, in order to use it properly, you still have to spend some time with Elements, read and watch some tutorials, learn a little about layers, and the like.
It obviously does not have the power of Adobe Photoshop CS2, and if you are a hardcore digi-photo/graphic bod, then stick with that, but if you are a bit liek me and want to turn out reasonable results fairly quickly, then save your pennies and get this.
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