Tattooing Art

Written by Jeff


Tattooing Art was rediscovered by Europeans when exploration brought

GETTING YOUR PHOTOS READY FOR SHARING

Written by Valerie Goettsch


One ofrepparttar main reasons people buy digital cameras is so they can share their photos with others. Even if you are just going to print your photos for yourself, you will want them to look their best. Here are some tips on getting your images ready for sharing or printing.

1. ORGANIZE YOUR PHOTOS

Deleterepparttar 115951 ones you don't like or those that are near duplicates of others. No sense in clogging up your hard drive or CDs with junk. Use a good photo management software program like ACDSEE 7, Adobe Photoshop Album 2.0 or Jasc Paint Shop Photo Album 5 to view, organize and name your images. These programs also let you batch rename so you can give more descriptive file names to a group of photos atrepparttar 115952 same time. You can add key words and tags to make finding your photos easier. Be detailed in your photo descriptions, not just "John and Laurie." You'll probably have hundreds of photos of your kids and it will be harder to findrepparttar 115953 one you're looking for. Better to say "John and Laurie waterskiing on Lake Powell, May 2004."

2. BACK UP YOUR ORIGINALS

Mistakes can happen. It is a good idea to back up all your images to a CD before you start editing or changing them. That way you always haverepparttar 115954 original to go back to if you accidentally save over an image or made changes to a photo that you later decide you don't like. CDs hold lots of photos, making it cheap insurance.

3. ROTATE IMAGES

Trying to look at a sideways photo is annoying. Use your photo management or editing software to rotate photos as needed. And if you have any images that are a little crooked, you can fix that using your editing software. Most photo editors have an automatic "straighten" function, or you can manually rotaterepparttar 115955 image a few degrees to straightenrepparttar 115956 horizon line.

4. REMOVE RED-EYE

Even with your digital camera's auto red-eye reduction function, your subject's eyes may still have red-eye. Use your photo editing software to remove it. Zoom in onrepparttar 115957 eyes and it will be easier for you to correctrepparttar 115958 red-eye. I've tried a number of red-eye correction tools and find thatrepparttar 115959 one that comes with ACDSEE 7's photo editor is amongrepparttar 115960 best. It zeros in just onrepparttar 115961 red eye and doesn't darkenrepparttar 115962 surrounding eye area like some other software does.

5. CROP YOUR PHOTOS

Crop out unnecessary or distracting backgrounds and focus in on your subject. Most photo editing programs will keeprepparttar 115963 aspect ratio, so when you draw a box aroundrepparttar 115964 area you want to focus on it will crop it as 4x6 or whatever you have specified. That way you won't end up with an odd size photo. Ofoto,repparttar 115965 online photo printer (now called Kodak EasyShare Gallery), also has a very good cropping tool for maintainingrepparttar 115966 proper print size. It comes with its free photo editor.

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