Looking for a scrapbooking product
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Re: Looking for a scrapbooking product
trulytango wrote:...you can do whatever you want and sod the black bars that result!
You are so correct, Iris. Sometimes 4:3 works best, sometimes 16:9, and then there are times when nothing will do but to use 1:1. I did a show using the square format that simply wouldn't have looked right with any other dimensions. The black surrounding the image served extremely well as a frame.
Also being a user of Digital Scrapbook Artist (and totally loving it), I quickly discovered you can use absolutely any ratio you like, so that's no problem at all, Jim.
Iris and I could become spokeswomen for Serif if they'd have us.
Barbara
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Re: Looking for a scrapbooking product
Hi Iris,
Thanks for the information about the free version. I will decide on what to get this week. All the suggestions are good.
I wanted to ask a question about Digital Scrapbook Artist 2. It has a feature called Image Cutout Studio. Does this feature work better than the Magic Extraction Tool in Photoshop Elements? I think the tool in Elements is frequently inadequate for doing fine extractions. If the Image Cutout Studio feature works much better, that would be a real help. In fact, I was looking at the Topaz website and they have a tool for doing this that I was going to evaluate and possibly purchase. Their tool costs $70. Digital Scrapbook Artist costs $50 and if it works well, I get a great scrapbook program and a better extraction tool for less than I would pay for the extraction tool from Topaz! Thanks ahead for any guidance here.
Jim
Thanks for the information about the free version. I will decide on what to get this week. All the suggestions are good.
I wanted to ask a question about Digital Scrapbook Artist 2. It has a feature called Image Cutout Studio. Does this feature work better than the Magic Extraction Tool in Photoshop Elements? I think the tool in Elements is frequently inadequate for doing fine extractions. If the Image Cutout Studio feature works much better, that would be a real help. In fact, I was looking at the Topaz website and they have a tool for doing this that I was going to evaluate and possibly purchase. Their tool costs $70. Digital Scrapbook Artist costs $50 and if it works well, I get a great scrapbook program and a better extraction tool for less than I would pay for the extraction tool from Topaz! Thanks ahead for any guidance here.
Jim
Jim S
- trulytango
- Posts: 2234
- Joined: Fri May 12, 2006 8:19 am
- Location: UK
Re: Looking for a scrapbooking product
Hi there
I don't have Elements, Jim, I have Photoshop CS. Element's Magic Extraction Tool you refer to is probably a version of Photoshop's Magic Wand tool... and the cutout studio in Scrapbook Artist does a pretty good job by comparison. Like the magic wand tool, you can vary the sensitivity/tolerance and add to your selection gradually when selecting fiddly or multiple toned areas.
Of the two, I'll be honest and say I prefer to use Photoshop for detailed extractions rather than DSA - mainly out of habit because I like to use a mixture of tools i.e. the pen tool mainly, along with the magic wand. However, the range of features available within DSA 2 is astounding for the price - especially 'Blend Modes', and it's Digikit Creator gives you access to everything you need each and every time.
TTFN
Iris
I don't have Elements, Jim, I have Photoshop CS. Element's Magic Extraction Tool you refer to is probably a version of Photoshop's Magic Wand tool... and the cutout studio in Scrapbook Artist does a pretty good job by comparison. Like the magic wand tool, you can vary the sensitivity/tolerance and add to your selection gradually when selecting fiddly or multiple toned areas.
Of the two, I'll be honest and say I prefer to use Photoshop for detailed extractions rather than DSA - mainly out of habit because I like to use a mixture of tools i.e. the pen tool mainly, along with the magic wand. However, the range of features available within DSA 2 is astounding for the price - especially 'Blend Modes', and it's Digikit Creator gives you access to everything you need each and every time.
TTFN
Iris
Windows 7 HP 64-bit, Intel i5 2500K Quad Core, 8GB RAM, 1.0GB Ge-Force NVIDIA GTX 560i, Adobe Photoshop CS5, Producer 6 (GPU Benchmark was 336, now 324), a big old Canon 20D and a funky Canon Powershot G15
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