Week 306 - Photo Editing for the Travelogue - 06-24-2012
Photo
Editing for the Travelogue:
(Creating travelogues Part
III)
Editing photos can be the most difficult and
time-consuming part of a good travelogue. But, it is the
most fun and rewarding. There are dozens, perhaps hundreds
of editing programs available. Every camera comes with
photo editing and there are many more free editors
available from the web.
The programs you buy are the most capable and can do
everything our little pea brains can dream up. For photo
editing, Adobe PhotoShop is the most known program, with a
current retail price of $699 to $999. Adobe Illustrator is
a program that can be used to create graphic designs,
priced at $599. These are tools that the professionals
use.
For consumers wanting to be creative at a reasonable cost,
there is Adobe's Elements, a
subset of PhotoShop for only $99. We use Paint Shop Pro, a
consumer level program the combines photo editing with
graphic design. The current version is $99. We are still
using the 6-year old version 9. We will show you amazing
tricks using this older version. The newest version will
do even more and easier. The terminology we use here is
from Paint Shop Pro Version 9. Many of these terms will
be the same for all editing programs, e.g. crop, clone,
etc.
Let's get started:
Lesson 1 - Cropping
Cropping is eliminating part of your photo; parts that
don't add to the quality or even detract. Here is an
original photo of Mount Rushmore, photo with crop marks
and the final cropped photo.
On the photography page of
www.BigRigBible.com
we have mentioned that you do not need to use high
megapixels if your photos are only going to the web or
emails. However, with large megapixel originals, you can
crop a small portion of the photo and still get a decent
photo. Here is what the same photos look like if your
original was low megapixel.
Lesson 2 - Photo fixing
There are hundreds of treatments you can apply to a photo,
such as Automatic Saturation Enhancement, Sharpen,
Contrast, Color Balance, to name a few. And each one has
dozens of parameters with limitless variations. This
original photo of Devils Tower, Wyoming was taken at
dusk. The center photo is Automatic Saturation
Enhancement with a More Colorful setting. The right photo
is Paint Shop Pro's One-Step Photo Fix which applies
several treatments. The One-Step fix is very useful on
darker photos. It makes them look like they were taken
earlier in the day.
Lesson 3 - Cloning
Look at this beautiful entrance to
www.SampleRanches.com
in Healdsburg, California. Ugh, there are power lines
marring the photo. You can remove them with the Clone
tool. You just grab some sky with the clone tool and
paste it over the power line.
It took 10 minutes to clone out the power lines, but what
a difference! Is this cheating? No, it shows the beauty
of God's creation without man's wires.
Lesson 4 - Merging
Suppose you are out on the Northern Rim of the Grand
Canyon with friends Gordon and Karen. You forgot your
tripod, no one is around and you want a group photo.
First, Pete takes a photo of Ellen, Gordon and Karen.
Then, "nobody moves" and Karen takes a photo of Pete,
Ellen and Gordon. Back at the ranch, you just select
around Pete with the Smart Edge selection tool and paste
him into the first photo. Takes about 5 minutes.
Here are more samples: 1) The run, jump and snap. The
left photo was not enhanced. You place your camera on a
rock, set the timer for 10 seconds. Then you run, jump and
snap! You get the photo. It might take a few tries. 2)
The clone brush puts air between the three rocks and the
graphic tools are used to create the sign.
On this one, we can't remember: maybe untouched or perhaps
a merge.
Another merge. Gordon is normal, but we put sun glasses
on Karen.
You didn't really think we drove the Mothership through
the Brawley, California's Jack-in-the-Box did you?
Merge!!!
Long Rifle Lodge in Alaska. Stuffed bear on the left,
merge right.
Stuffed friends on the left, on the right, real sign, real
bear, but merged.
One more trick for this week. We don't have a wide angle
lens for our camera, but we do have the Smokey City Design
Panorama Factory Version 5. With this software you can
"stitch" together 2 to 10 photos and get a panoramic
mural. The program has a few thousand options, but we just
used the defaults plus telling the program which camera we
have. This 180 degree picture of frozen Muncho Lake in
British Columbia was our first attempt at "stitching"
together nine photos to create this one. Looking closely
in the middle you can see a watermark as this was a trial
program version. It worked so well, we coughed the
$100.00 to buy our own copy.
This Crater Lake, Oregon panoramic was built from four
photos. (Click to view larger photo:
www.BigRigBible.com/WeeklyPhotos/W253/W253-20-1920.jpg)
Oh yes, it is probably easier to do these parlor
tricks with 45 years of computer programming experience.
But, really, anyone can do them with a little instruction
(email, hint, hint) and patience.
Whatever tool you use, if you enjoy the outcome, the time
spent will be fun.
Love, Pete, Ellen and Mandy
This special edition travelogue was brought to you as there is nothing new in our travel.
Photos from 2006 to 2009