Adobe photoshop elements User Manual

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ADOBE PHOTOSHOP ELEMENTS
User Guide
Using the Variations command
The Variations command lets you adjust the color 
balance, contrast, and saturation of an image by 
showing you thumbnails of alternatives. 
This command is most useful for average-key 
images that don’t require precise color adjust-
ments. It does not work on indexed-color images.
To use the Variations command:
1
Choose Enhance > Variations.
The two thumbnails at the top of the dialog box 
show the original selection (Original) and the 
selection with its currently selected adjustments 
(Current Pick). When you first open the dialog 
box, these two images are the same. As you make 
adjustments, the Current Pick image changes to 
reflect your choices.
2
Select Show Clipping if you want to display a 
neon preview of areas in the image that will be 
clipped by the adjustment—that is, converted to 
pure white or pure black. Clipping can result in 
undesirable color shifts, as distinct colors in the 
original image are mapped to the same color. 
Clipping does not occur when you adjust 
midtones. 
3
Select what to adjust in the image:
Shadows, Midtones, or Highlights to indicate 
whether you want to adjust the dark, middle, or 
light areas.
Saturation to change the degree of hue in the 
image. If you exceed the maximum saturation for 
a color, it may be clipped.
4
Drag the Fine/Coarse slider to determine the 
amount of each adjustment. Moving the slider one 
tick mark doubles the adjustment amount. 
5
Adjust the color and brightness:
To add a color to the image, click the appropriate 
color thumbnail. 
To subtract a color, click the thumbnail for its 
opposite color. (See “About the color wheel” on 
page 91.) F
or example, to subtract cyan, click the 
More Red thumbnail.
To adjust brightness, click a thumbnail on the 
right side of the dialog box.
Each time you click a thumbnail, other thumbnails 
change. The center thumbnail always reflects the 
current choices.
6
Click OK.
Applying special color effects to 
images
The Invert, Equalize, Threshold, and Posterize 
commands change colors or brightness values in 
an image but are typically used for enhancing 
color and producing special effects, rather than for 
correcting color.