I clearly remember teaching my first class on Adobe Photoshop Elements; version 4 was the latest and greatest way back then. I was all set to teach a room full of budding photographers how to improve their photos with the magic that is digital imaging. I thought. Unfortunately I made a major miscalculation. I was so intent on showing my students how to crop, resize, correct and sharpen I completely blew off the organizer as something they could handle on their own. Seems the first thing my students wanted to do was learn how to handle the hundreds of images they were shooting at a fast clip. Downloading and organizing files on their computers was a definite challenge for folks accustomed to sticking prints on album pages. (If “stick” and “album” don’t correlate for you, go ask an old person.)
Fortunately, one of the students in my class (an incredibly smart lady named Tommie) had already gotten the organizer down pat and was able to get me through that first session. The next time the class met, after a mad dash to the bookstore, I came armed with The Photoshop Elements Book for Digital Photographers by Scott Kelby, all tabbed up and highlighted in three different colors. Thanks to his step-by-step instructions I was able to walk my students through the organizer’s tags, dateline and albums (the virtual kind) and on through to the editing workspace. There were so many questions from students that I had just not anticipated. Thankfully, Scott had.
So here we are a few fleeting years later. Adobe continues to update Elements and Scott continues to publish his books right along with them. (Just in case you’re the only photographer on the planet who doesn’t know this, Scott is the number one bestselling author of computer and technology books.) Co-written with Matt Kloskowski, fellow Photoshop guy and an Elements specialist, The Photoshop Elements 10 Book for Digital Photographers (New Riders), has just hit the shelves (and the nice folks from Kelby Media Group Inc. were kind enough to send me one).
This latest edition is, as are all Kelby & Kloskowski books, easy to read, logically organized and beautifully designed. My favorite aspect of this book is that I can find a specific technique, tool or setting in a hurry because the book works as both a how-to guide and as a reference. In other words, when a student asks a question and the answer eludes me I can grab the book, flip to the index, flip to the page and appear to be extremely knowledgeable in no time. Also, just like a good cookbook, each step in the PSE 10 book is illustrated to demonstrate what the photo and/or computer screen should look like at that point in the process.
My students love Scott’s books because they read as if they have been written for them, normal people who want to make their photos look better, not techies who consider The Fundamentals of Physics light reading. For example, most of my students come into my classes very frustrated with their camera manuals which usually define technical terms–if they bother to do it at all–using other technical terms and therefore are not terribly helpful. Scott’s books are the very opposite of that. If a technique needs breaking down, he does it. If a tool needs detailed explanation, you get one. All in every-day language that makes sense and–this is the coolest part–in context. Not in a lecture format but in a this-is-what-you-do-to-get-this-result format.
For instance, many of my students–the ones who having been using the free-download digital imaging software or the one included with their camera–come into class terrified of layers. I guess they consider it “that really complicated procedure Photoshop people do” and they want no part of it. Then they learn how to apply gaussian blur using Scott’s portait finishing technique, after which I tell them they’ve just used layers. They’re amazed. They’re astounded. And some of them are slow to believe me because it was just so easy.
You can read more about The Photoshop Elements 10 Book for Digital Photographers at http://kelbytraining.com/product/the-photoshop-elements-10-book-for-digital-photographers





