ChrisAnn
Junior Forum Member
Posts: 227
Open to constructive criticism of photos: Yes
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Post by ChrisAnn on Apr 23, 2019 12:03:12 GMT
I know in earlier editions it was easy to compare two photos by having them sit side-by-side or one above the other in the Organizer. Is this still available in PSE15, and, if so, could you point me in the right direction please? I've searched under Help and in this Forum but can't locate it.
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Post by michelb on Apr 23, 2019 14:02:53 GMT
The shortcut is F12 in the organizer. It's a variant of the F11 command for viewing in full screen. For detailed comparisons I prefer to rely on the editor by playing with floating windows. I can even compare an original and a duplicated version. Set the preferences in the editor to allow floating windows in expert mode.
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ChrisAnn
Junior Forum Member
Posts: 227
Open to constructive criticism of photos: Yes
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Post by ChrisAnn on Apr 23, 2019 17:22:03 GMT
Thanks, I will make a note for when I forget.
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Post by cats4jan on Apr 24, 2019 10:20:52 GMT
Not exactly what you were asking, but when I want to really examine a photo (or in my case, a digital scrapbook page) I use it as my desktop photo. I don’t know why it seems better than viewing full sized in Photoshop, it just does.
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Post by Sepiana on Apr 24, 2019 13:09:53 GMT
For detailed comparisons I prefer to rely on the editor by playing with floating windows. I can even compare an original and a duplicated version. Set the preferences in the editor to allow floating windows in expert mode.
I also prefer to use the Editor for detailed comparisons. However, I can't get used to floating windows. So, I duplicate the file and use the Tile viewing mode.
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ChrisAnn
Junior Forum Member
Posts: 227
Open to constructive criticism of photos: Yes
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Post by ChrisAnn on Apr 24, 2019 21:14:50 GMT
Lots of ideas, thanks. I tend to take several photos of the same scene but then have difficulty deciding which one to keep. I'm hoping that viewing both at the same time in the Organizer will be a quick way of weeding out the straight-forward duplicates before going on to choose the best composition.
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