![]() The Lens Correction filter has gotten an update, and now offers better automatic and custom functionality. The Adobe Camera Raw 6 plug-in supports more than 275 camera models, and offers advanced editing tools for removing noise, applying new effects (like vignettes and grains), and sharpening at the earliest stages. ![]() Other new functions give you expanded ways to deal with images either before or after importing. ![]() Selection technology has been given a supercharge with improved edge detection and masking by way of the intelligent Refine Edge tool, with which even complicated borders (especially those containing fur and hair) can be captured with high accuracy and improved with only a few minutes of not-painstaking painting. The results aren't 100 percent flawless 100 percent of the time, but they're so outstanding in general that they may leave you wondering whether you'll ever again send out an imperfect image.Īnother new Photoshop CS5 feature, while it may sound a bit more mundane, is hardly less practical when it comes to achieving that goal. No, seriously: If an errant dog is marring your otherwise pristine capture of a green field, just select the dog, choose the option (it can be as easy as hitting the Delete key), and the dog disappears-but the field remains. Content-Aware Fill is that idea's logical extension, letting you excise certain elements while preserving the image's background. Sound familiar? It should- Photoshop CS4 ($700 - $1,000 street, ) added Content-Aware Scaling, so you could resize images to reduce dead space, but preserve the content you cared about. The most eye-popping of the changes here is Content-Aware Fill. Photoshop CS5 may not be a must-have revision for every user, but it's an outstanding, easy-to-use, and-yes-magical release that shows Adobe isn't yet done changing the game. The newest, Photoshop CS5 ($699 to $999 list, $199–$899 list for upgrades), implements features that aid in selection, painting, and high dynamic range (HDR) photography, as well as a new capability that's as close to digital prestidigitation as we've yet seen. Clarke postulated that "any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic," and every new release of Adobe's industry-standard bitmap image-editor, Photoshop, comes closer to proving that true.
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