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by David Kay,William “The Ferrett”Steinmetz
Paint Shop Pro
®
9
FOR
DUMmIES
‰
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Paint Shop Pro
®
9 For Dummies
®
Published by
Wiley Publishing, Inc.
111 River Street
Hoboken, NJ 07030-5774
Copyright © 2005 by Wiley Publishing, Inc., Indianapolis, Indiana
Published by Wiley Publishing, Inc., Indianapolis, Indiana
Published simultaneously in Canada
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or
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tered trademark of Jasc Software, Inc. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
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Library of Congress Control Number: 2004116496
ISBN: 0-7645-7935-5
Manufactured in the United States of America
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About the Authors
David Kay is a writer, an engineer, an artist, and a naturalist who combines
professions with the same effectiveness as his favorite business establish-
ment, Acton Muffler, Brake, and Ice Cream (now defunct). Dave has written
more than a dozen computer books, by himself or with friends. His other
titles include various editions of Microsoft Works For Windows For Dummies,
WordPerfect For Windows For Dummies, Graphics File Formats, and The
Internet: Complete Reference.
In his other life, as the Poo-bah of Brightleaf, Dave is a conservation biologist.
He and his wife, Katy, and golden retriever, Alex, live in the wilds of
Massachusetts. In his spare time, Dave studies animal and human tracking
and munches edible wild plants. He also has been known to make strange
blobs from molten glass, sing Gilbert and Sullivan choruses in public, and
hike in whatever mountains he can get to. He longs to return to New Zealand
and track kiwis and hedgehogs in Wanaka. He finds writing about himself in
the third person like this quite peculiar and will stop now.
William “The Ferrett” Steinmetz is a freelance Webmaster and editor who
helms StarCityGames.com, one of the premier strategy sites for the col-
lectible card game Magic: The Gathering. He wrote most of Internet:
The Complete Reference and has written computer book reviews for
Amazon.com and TechSoc.com. The Ferrett lives in Cleveland and is geeky.
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Dedication
To the restoration of reason, conscience, and good will in the United States of
America and the world. — D.K.
To my wife, Gini. I promised forever. And I mean to keep that, I do. — T.F.
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Publisher’s Acknowledgments
We’re proud of this book; please send us your comments through our online registration form
located at
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Some of the people who helped bring this book to market include the following:
Acquisitions, Editorial,
and Media Development
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(www.the5thwave.com)
Composition
Project Coordinator: Emily Wichlinski
Layout and Graphics: Carl Byers, Andrea Dahl,
Lauren Goddard, Joyce Haughey,
Barry Offringa, Heather Ryan
Proofreaders: Laura Albert, Leeann Harney,
Jessica Kramer, TECHBOOKS Production
Services
Indexer: TECHBOOKS Production Services
Publishing and Editorial for Technology Dummies
Richard Swadley, Vice President and Executive Group Publisher
Andy Cummings, Vice President and Publisher
Mary Bednarek, Executive Acquisitions Director
Mary C. Corder, Editorial Director
Publishing for Consumer Dummies
Diane Graves Steele, Vice President and Publisher
Joyce Pepple, Acquisitions Director
Composition Services
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Debbie Stailey, Director of Composition Services
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Contents at a Glance
Introduction 1
Part I: The Basics 5
Chapter 1: Opening, Viewing, Managing, and Saving Image Files 7
Chapter 2: Getting Bigger, Smaller, and Turned Around 29
Chapter 3: Selecting Parts of an Image 39
Chapter 4: Moving, Copying, and Reshaping Parts of Your Image 59
Part II: Prettying Up Photographs 73
Chapter 5: Capturing Pictures from Paper, Camera, or Screen 75
Chapter 6: Fixing Broken Pictures: Removing Scratches,
Blurry Parts, and Red Eye 99
Chapter 7: Adjusting Your Picture’s Brightness, Contrast, and Color 115
Chapter 8: Heavy-Duty Photo Alterations: Adding People and Removing Zits 131
Part III: Painting Pictures 147
Chapter 9: Basic Painting, Spraying, and Filling 149
Chapter 10: Advanced Painting for the Artiste 173
Chapter 11: Layering Images 201
Chapter 12: Adding Layers of Text or Shapes 221
Chapter 13: Adding Artsy Effects 241
Part IV: Taking It to the Street 261
Chapter 14: Printing 263
Chapter 15: Creating Web-Friendly Images 273
Part V: The Part of Tens 283
Chapter 16: Ten Perplexing Problems 285
Chapter 17: Ten Fast Fixes for Photo Failures 293
Chapter 18: Ten Topics a Little Too Advanced for the Rest of This Book 303
Index 331
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Table of Contents
Introduction 1
What Can You Do with This Book? 1
Is This the Book for You? 2
How Is This Book Organized? 2
Part I: The Basics 3
Part II: Prettying Up Photographs 3
Part III: Painting Pictures 3
Part IV: Taking It to the Street 3
Part V: The Part of Tens 4
Icons Used in This Book 4
Part I: The Basics 5
Chapter 1: Opening, Viewing, Managing, and Saving Image Files . . .7
Three Ways to Open Image Files 8
Opening, Managing, and Sorting Files with the Browser 9
Opening the right file with File➪Open 11
Secrets of opening a file by double-clicking 12
Viewing and Zooming an Image 14
Zooming and moving an image in the window 14
Working on several images at a time 15
Getting Information about an Image 15
Saving an Image File 16
Saving an Image As a Paint Shop Pro File 17
Saving a Copy of Your File As Another File Type 17
Saving the Whole Enchilada, Your Workspace 18
Using Native and Foreign File Types 19
Paint Shop Pro files (pspimage or PSP) 20
BMP 21
TIFF 21
GIF 22
JPEG 22
PNG 23
Using Vector File Types (Drawing Files) 24
Opening vector files 24
Saving vector files — not 25
Converting or Renaming Batches of Files 25
File Types and Auto-Action Messages about Colors 27
Obtaining Image Files from the Web 28
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Chapter 2: Getting Bigger, Smaller, and Turned Around . . . . . . . . . . . .29
Getting Sized 29
Proportioning 30
Dimensioning 31
Avoiding degradation 31
Cropping (Trimming) Your Edges 32
Getting Turned Around, Mirrored, or Flipped 34
Rotating 34
Mirroring and flipping 35
Taking on Borders 35
Achieving a Particular Canvas Size 36
Chapter 3: Selecting Parts of an Image . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .39
Selecting an Area 40
Selecting by outlining: The Freehand tool 42
Selecting a rectangle or other regular shape 44
Selecting by color or brightness: The Magic Wand tool 45
Modifying Your Selection 48
Moving the selection outline 49
Adding to or subtracting from your selection 49
Expanding and contracting by pixels 50
Removing specks and holes in your selection 50
Editing the selection 52
Feathering for More Gradual Edges 52
Anti-Aliasing for Smoother Edges 54
Selecting All, None, or Everything But 54
An Example: Selecting Alex, and Only Alex 55
Avoiding Selection Problems in Layered Images 57
Chapter 4: Moving, Copying, and Reshaping Parts of Your Image . . .59
Floating, Moving, and Deleting Selections 59
Cutting, Copying, and Pasting from the Windows Clipboard 61
Cutting and copying 61
Pasting 62
Pasting to create a new picture: As New Image 62
Pasting on an existing image: As New Selection 63
Pasting for maximum flexibility: As New Layer 63
Moving or pasting without the background color:
As Transparent Selection 64
Pasting while scaling to fit: Into Selection 64
Resizing, Rotating, Deforming, and Perspective-izing 65
Preparing for deformation 65
Doing the deformation 66
Other handy deformities 70
Paint Shop Pro 9 For Dummies
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[...]... of your image in a different file type for someone who uses other software, like Photoshop Also, earlier versions of Paint Shop Pro can’t read later Paint Shop Pro files (Paint Shop Pro 7 can’t read Paint Shop Pro 9 files, for example.) To create files for earlier versions of Paint Shop Pro, see the instructions for saving a copy of your image in the section “Saving a Copy of Your File As Another File... or Outside Paint Shop Pro 288 “The Paint Doesn’t Come Out Right” 288 “New Text Appears Whenever I Try to Change Text” 2 89 “The Text or Shape Comes Out the Wrong Color, Texture, or Pattern” 2 89 “The Magic Wand Tool Doesn’t Select Well” 290 “The Tool Works, but Not Like I Want” 290 Paint Shop Pro Doesn’t Open Images!” 291 xv xvi Paint Shop Pro 9 For Dummies Chapter... extension (.jpg for JPEG, for example) ߜ Paint Shop Pro can’t open the file Paint Shop Pro can open many different types of file, but not all of them ߜ Paint Shop Pro may not be configured to open that file type See the nearby sidebar, “Making Paint Shop Pro open the right file types when you double-click.” Making Paint Shop Pro open the right file types when you double-click Two problems can occur with... Explorer window, for example — and it displays the Paint Shop Pro palette icon, you can open it in Paint Shop Pro by double-clicking that icon If you have several images you want to open, double-click each of them separately, and they all get a separate window in Paint Shop Pro You don’t end up with multiple copies of Paint Shop Pro running If you have an image file that Paint Shop Pro doesn’t open... where you left off Paint Shop Pro files can have any color depth (maximum number of colors) you choose Pspimage is the latest and greatest of the Paint Shop Pro native formats; earlier versions used the PSP extension Programs other than Paint Shop Pro and Animation Shop don’t often read Paint Shop Pro files, however You may need to save a copy of your image in a different file type for someone who uses... sidebar, “When Paint Shop Pro notes your limitations.”) That merge doesn’t happen to the Paint Shop Pro image you’re working on — only to the file copy you’re creating Don’t worry about the message — just click Yes to proceed Saving the Whole Enchilada, Your Workspace Got a hot and spicy date? Need to wrap up one Paint Shop Pro project and start chewing on another? You can close Paint Shop Pro at any time... Extensions for Known File Types Most of the time, you don’t have to do anything special to open a particular file type or to save your work as that type of file — and then again, sometimes you do Paint Shop Pro, in most cases, simply asks you a few questions to resolve any problems when you’re opening or saving a foreign file type Paint Shop Pro files (pspimage or PSP) The native Paint Shop Pro 9 file... JPG files, some program other than Paint Shop Pro opens the file These problems usually occur when you have more than one graphics program The latest one installed may grab all the file types for itself Both problems can be solved the same way Follow these steps to specify which files are to be opened (or not) by Paint Shop Pro: 1 Choose File➪Preferences➪File Format Associations The File Format Associations... with the part Dave uses for his comb-over) Part III: Painting Pictures Part III is for anyone who plans to paint, draw, or otherwise doodle in Paint Shop Pro Chapter 9 gets you painting, spraying, erasing, and otherwise doing all those basic things that everyday folks have been trying to do with graphics software for years Chapter 10 is for those who long for some serious support for the digital artist,... Paint Shop Pro is great, but in the end you probably want your image to appear somewhere else: on a piece of paper, on the Web, 3 4 Paint Shop Pro 9 For Dummies or as part of an animation Chapter 14 shows you how to best fit your image on paper It also tells you how to print multi-image pages for photo albums, collages, or portfolios Chapter 15 tells you how to get exactly the image file you want for . by David Kay,William “The Ferrett”Steinmetz Paint Shop Pro ® 9 FOR DUMmIES ‰ 01_5 793 55 ffirs.qxd 12/20/04 9: 58 PM Page i Paint Shop Pro ® 9 For Dummies ® Published by Wiley Publishing, Inc. 111. Deforming, and Perspective-izing 65 Preparing for deformation 65 Doing the deformation 66 Other handy deformities 70 Paint Shop Pro 9 For Dummies x 02_5 793 55 ftoc.qxd 12/20/04 10:00 PM Page x Part. script 3 29 Index 331 Paint Shop Pro 9 For Dummies xvi 02_5 793 55 ftoc.qxd 12/20/04 10:00 PM Page xvi Introduction C ongratulations! Brilliant person that you are, you use Paint Shop Pro! Thousands
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