Adobe Photoshop Elements 5
Verdict
Best-of-breed photo management, editing and sharing with great usability and value
Review Date: 18 Jan 2007
Price when reviewed: (£69 inc VAT)
Overall Rating


We put all the leading photo-editing applications through their paces in a group test this month (it's exclusively available as a downloadable PDF - see www.pcpro.co.uk/links/149photo), with Google Picasa, Corel Paint Shop Pro and many more fighting it out. But Photoshop Elements was the clear winner.
Elements is built around a cut-down version of the industry-standard Photoshop, but the secret of its success is the separate Organizer module for image management. This is built around a central photo browser, into which all imported photos are added as smoothly resizable thumbnails. With thousands of images to manage, it would be easy to get lost, but the Organizer offers a timeline to quickly narrow your search, as well as a superb Date view that lets you visually locate photos via a calendar. A new Map view allows you to view photos by where they were taken; this is either automatic from a GPS-enabled camera or configured manually. You can also view images by folder and import batch.
Adding new photos to your collection is straightforward. By default, Adobe Downloader copies all images to a new folder, while an advanced mode lets you see thumbnails, rotate images, apply author and copyright information, and automatically split your photos into subfolder groups based on when the images were taken. Particularly useful is the ability to set the downloader to automatically remove red eye, but don't expect it to pick up all cases.
The downloader can also now be used to suggest Photo Stacks. These uniquely let you group similar photos - with, say, different exposure settings - under a single representative image. You can expand or collapse any or all stacks in situ in the Photo Browser - this is also true of Version Sets, which are the stacks Elements creates when you edit files.
Stacks allow full control over your images, as does Elements' ad hoc Collections, which let you create arbitrary groupings of images, say, for printing or further work. What makes Elements stand out, though, are its tagging capabilities, which let you set up hierarchies of keywords - family, friends, events, places - and then quickly apply them to your photos for future retrieval. In other applications, this tends to be a thankless task, but Elements makes it visual and simple. A face-tagging feature analyses images, isolating faces that are then presented in a dedicated dialog ready for tagging.
In terms of editing power, Elements' Organizer is now limited to automatic red-eye removal and a single Auto Smart Fix command. If you need more than that, you have to open your photo into the separate Editor module's Quick Fix window. This provides cropping, red-eye removal and selection tools to the left, a large before-and-after preview in the centre, and the most important colour-correction controls as sliders to the right. In the Adjust and Filter menus, options include control over levels, hue/saturation and skin colour. New options include Adjust Sharpness and Correct Camera Distortion.
Switch to Full Edit mode for full editing power. There's a range of retouching tools, such as the Healing Brush tool for removing unwanted spots and objects, and the ability to apply colour corrections as non-destructive layers. The Layers palette also opens up the possibility of advanced creative compositing, while the Artwork and Effects palette lets you apply artistic filters, backgrounds, shapes, text effects and frames.
advertisement
- Nokia recalls 14 million faulty chargers
- Play.com order glitch leaks names and addresses
- Rupert Murdoch considers Google block
- Skype safe as eBay strikes deal
- Rick Astley worm infects iPhones
- Web censorship "breaches WTO rules"
- Facebook users to join the IM crowd
- Government promises broadband windfall for Scots
- Kingston bringing films to a flash drive near you
- Scientists tout cloaking tool for search engines
- Why all the fuss over Windows Explorer?
- Your iPhone has a virus? Well it's your fault
- Motorola pays Lucas for its Droid
- Where are the killer apps for Windows?
- Will you hit the Orange iPhone "unlimited" cap?
- USB 3 first benchmark - it's here, and it's fast
- Why Windows 7 has forced me to worry about security
- How Dixons is (under)selling Windows 7
- Do I like Windows 7 because it's so like a Mac?
- No Windows 7 drivers turn Dell M1330 into a doorstop
- When will you get superfast broadband?
- The Crapware Con
- The 10 greatest tech U-turns
- Windows 7: everything you need to know
- PC 2010 and beyond
- The High Street Rip Off
- How to avoid the high-street rip-offs
- Do online protests really work?
- How to buy Windows 7 for £50 less: the truth about OEM versions
- Free computing lessons for kids
- The bulletproof Dell that costs an arm and a leg
- Microsoft Office 2010 Technical Preview: Q&A
- Lawnmowers, the TyTN II and one odd insurance request
- There'll never be a bulletproof OS
- How far can we trust apps?
- Five nice touches in Outlook 2010
- Building a better Google
- Beware HP's horrendous printer-driver glitch
- Microsoft debuts free Morro antivirus package
- Getting started with Search Server 2008 Express
advertisement

Printed from www.pcpro.co.uk

