I would get Photoshop Elements 3. It is greatly improved and it was
already pretty good to begin with. It has the superb shadow/highlight
tool which was introduced in Photoshop CS. You will probably never
outgrow it and need to spend the money for Photoshop.
Winsor
Long Beach, California, USA
On Jan 12, 2005, at 10:26 AM, Jamie Costello wrote:
>
> I have somehow found myself at the digital divide. I am confused by
> digital
> cameras, but not by the images they produce. I have seen a lot of
> photgraphs taken with digital cameras and wonder how the heck I am
> going to
> produce one I like. In waiting out the mega-pixel and features war, I
> have
> dcided that I do not want a digital camera. I love film and I just
> want to
> make some digital images.
>
> I am going to buy a film scanner (no big deal, right? OM content - to
> scan
> in the film I've shot with my OMs). I would like to know if there is
> any
> consensus or wisdom, conventional or not, as to which version of
> Photoshop
> has an optimal balance of features to ease-of-use. I know that it's
> difficult for someone to recommend a product not knowing a lot about
> me, I'm
> just looking for some general guidelines.
>
> Jamie
> Fort Myers, FL
>
>
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