Hi everyone.I have two pics of the same scene. One underexposed (great sky) one overexposed (good foreground) In photoshop elements 2, can anyone please tell Me in simple terms!, how to combine the two pictures.thanks.
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Feb 06, 2004 17:33 | #1 Hi everyone.I have two pics of the same scene. One underexposed (great sky) one overexposed (good foreground) In photoshop elements 2, can anyone please tell Me in simple terms!, how to combine the two pictures.thanks.
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Meerkat17 Goldmember 1,868 posts Joined Jan 2004 Location: Durham UK More info | Feb 06, 2004 18:39 | #2 I don't use Photoshop Elements but it can't be that different from PS7. David
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MrChevy Senior Member 655 posts Joined Jan 2003 Location: Salem, Oregon More info | Feb 18, 2004 22:30 | #3 You are trying to do this?:
It is done with copying the one file over the other and erasing what you don't want. Ken Ken
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Jesper Goldmember 2,742 posts Joined Oct 2003 Location: The Netherlands More info | Feb 19, 2004 09:03 | #4 I just asked the same question yesterday! Canon EOS 5D Mark III
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iwatkins Goldmember 1,510 posts Likes: 1 Joined Sep 2003 Location: Gloucestershire, UK More info | Feb 19, 2004 09:13 | #5 Don't know how to do it in Elements, mainly as I don't use it.
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john_houghton Member 175 posts Joined Feb 2002 More info | Feb 19, 2004 15:59 | #6 Jesper wrote: On Luminous Landscape there's an article that describes how to do it (see my previous post). However, you need layer masks for it, which PS Elements doesn't have. This is not altogether true; PS Elements does have layer masks. All that it lacks is the ability to create them. However, if you do happen to have a layered PSD file with masks, Elements can do most of the processing of the masks that you need. So if you can lay your hands on such a file, you can resize it to suit your images and then paste your images into the layers. Likewise, you can paste images into the layer masks, should you need to. Having done that, you should be able to do most of the stuff that the article you refer to recommends. Anybody with the full Photoshop or PS LE would be able to supply you with a tiny sample file for you to use for this purpose.
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evilenglishman Goldmember 1,184 posts Likes: 2 Joined Jul 2003 More info | Feb 19, 2004 16:26 | #7 if elements has layers (I don't use it) then it will work. Click here to view and/or sign the petition
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