Photo Editing Program That Is Easy For A Beginner Mac

Photo Editing Program That Is Easy For A Beginner Mac 4,6/5 7356 reviews

Note: Keep in mind that Filmora9 is not a professional video editing program as powerful as Sony Vegas Pro for Windows or Final Cut Pro for Mac, which are famous for their omnipotence and precise controls on every detail. It's only a decent video editing software for beginners with easy to use features and for a reasonable price.

This is the first thing that was taught to me in photo editing (once we got all that super hard opening-files stuff behind us). Find the 'Levels' option in your photoshop workspace.

Approaching this from the menu works easiest, as the icons can trick you up a bit. Find the 'Image' button at the top of your workspace, then scroll your mouse down to 'Adjustments' and then over to 'Levels' You should have a view that looks like this: This is the histogram of the photo-it graphically shows the distribution of data throughout the photograph. In layman's terms, it shows the highs and lows of the colors in your photo. If you click the 'Channel' box, you can switch it over to the colors 'R' 'G' and 'B'-which is what you want to do. Switch to the 'R' or 'Red' channel to work on it. At the edges of your histogram you will see either spikes in the graph or depressions-these can be caused by any number of reasons, but regardless of the source-we dont need em!

Click the black and white sliders at the bottom to slide them just past the spike/depression in the histogram. This cleans up the noise and makes your photo's colors REALLY stand out!

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Now heres the general rule of thumb: When tweaking the levels, always work toward the middle of the histogram. If there is a depression at the very beginning, move the slider to where the histogram data curve starts. If there is a spike, move to the next lowest point past the spike.

If there is a slow curve, move the slider a little ways up the curve to make the colors pop! For what computer systems are microsoft windows, linux and mac os x.

Lightroom is really more of an image management and conversion from raw software, but it will do some basic editing. It was moderately priced for purchase as a standalone application, but recently Adobe went to cloud delivery of Lightroom (and Photoshop), you now have to pay a monthly fee, I think $10, to use it from the Adobe Cloud. Since the Inspire shoots in jpg you don't need to have a raw converter, but images shot in jpg that are not well exposed or have color problems aren't as editable as raw files since the jpg format isn't as rich with image data as raw. If you have a long tonal scale, something with deep shadows and bright highlights, you will be able to recover more of those tonalities from a raw capture. But then you need a converter. If you are on the most recent version of OSX (Yosemite), iPhoto was just released as Photos, it has some basic editing tools but will not convert the.dng files, just checked that.

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But it is free. Even iPhoto has some tools as well, but neither of them take you beyond basic control over value and color. Of course Photoshop is great, but not appropriate for beginners and not cheap. There is a standalone version called Photoshop Elements, inexpensive at $69 right now, that has some of Photoshop's main image manipulation tools and may be the best value for the money. They offer a 30 day trial as well. Here is a link: I've been a commercial and fine art photographer since the '80's, and have mostly used the Adobe products, so can't offer any insight into some of the other programs out there, sorry. If you go the Adobe route there are lots of tutorials for their products out there, YouTube videos, Lynda.com, etc.