Quick Search
Latest News
- Samsung WB2000 Review
- Schneider Kreuznach to Launch Tilt-Shift Lenses for DSLRs
- Strobox Offers Lighting Diagrams On Your iPhone
- New DxO Optics Pro v6.1 for Windows supports Canon 7D, G11 and Nikon D3000
- AF-S NIKKOR 300mm f/2.8G ED VR II
- Three Songs, No Flash! - Your Ultimate Guide to Concert Photography by Loe Beerens
- Pentax K-7 Digital Camera Review
- Panasonic could unveil a new FourThirds camera in 2010 rumor.
- Canon PowerShot G11 Review
- Panasonic Lumix DMC-FP8 Review
How-To Edit JPEG Files
- 25-02-2007
- Categorized in: How To

So you didn't shoot RAW, and your photo's got some problem areas. If you can't take the picture again, you can still fix it. By doing repairs on Adjustment Layers, users of Adobe Photoshop and Photoshop Elements can use masks to designate which areas to fix and which to leave alone. Sound hard? It's not.
In the original image, the blacks and the shadows are fine, but the sky and the foreground are washed out. Since they're not equally bright, you can't fix all of them with one global correction. The dogs could use a bit more contrast, too.
Read the whole article here

