Adobe Elements 3

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XMP, RAW & A FUN INTERFACE

Elements 3.0 --
More Than Meets the Eye

Adobe Premiere Elements 3.0 is the third major version of the Premiere Elements video editing application for consumers. It was also available in a bundle with Adobe Photoshop Elements 5.0 in 2006. External links Adobe Premiere Elements 3.0 at Adobe (archived 2006-10-08). Adobe Premiere Elements 3.0 – Released in September 2006. Adobe added HDV support, stop motion capture, audio narration, full-screen playback, and the ability to capture from WDM sources (such as webcams and analog capture cards). This version improved ease of use by adding Sceneline editing and allowing titles to be created and edited directly in the Monitor.

By MIKE PASINI
Editor
The Imaging Resource Digital Photography Newsletter

Updated: Dec. 10, 2004

It's been over two years since Elements has been updated. It wasn't broke, but at that rate, Adobe might be. Still, how could Adobe possibly improve its competent entry-level image editing software famous for its extraordinary HTML Help and Tutorials on image editing?

Well, Adobe is not an ordinary company. Sometimes we wonder if it's a company at all. It seems more like a movement. A movement inspired by the Spot and then the Pixel. There's always more to Adobe than meets the eye.

And that goes double for Elements 3.0. As we used the new version, we kept interrupting ourselves to ask how they implemented this or that. We'd look it up in the Help system and find out a whole new architecture had been implemented. Elements 3.0 lays some cornerstones for imaging we find very exciting.

We remain a bit perplexed, however, by the twin versions. The Windows and Macintosh versions do not share the same feature set. Nor the same price.

We spent no little time comparing Mac and Windows version 2 with this latest release to uncover exactly what was new. And we can tell you both versions include the following new features:

  • Camera Raw and 16-bit channel support
  • A Noise removal filter
  • Healing Brush and Spot Healing Brush to wipe away image flaws
  • New and improved automatic image enhancement tools including Smart Fix, Shadow/Highlight Adjustment and revised Redeye Removal
  • A Styles & Effects palette with over 100 customizable filters, effects and layer styles
  • A Cookie Cutter tool to crop photos in predefined shapes
  • A Photo Bin to quickly switch among several open images
  • A command to divide a page of scanned photos into individual image files
  • Dynamic PDF slide shows with transitions, captions, music and narration
  • Flexible print options including multiple images, contact sheets and labels
The $99.99 Windows version for XP/2000 adds 1) an organizer that seems borrowed from Album, 2) themed photo email using decorative backgrounds and frames, 3) Photo Compare to see several images side by side, 4) integrated image archiving with keywords to CD or DVD and 5) Quick Fix.

The $89.99 Mac version for OS X adds the Cookie Cutter to create decorative edges. It does not have the Album-inspired organizing or sharing features but does integrate nicely as iPhoto's image editor.

Shadows/Highlights Command
Easier than explaining Levels

In this review, we'll look at the image editing features shared by both versions.

System requirements for either system include a color monitor with 16-bit color or greater video card, 1024x768 or greater monitor resolution and a CD-ROM drive.

Windows system requirements are an Intel Pentium III or 4 (or compatible) 800 MHz or faster processor, Windows XP Professional or Home Edition with Service Pack 1; Windows 2000 with Service Pack 4 or later (Adobe applications on Windows XP with Service Pack 2), 256-MB of RAM (512-MB or more recommended), 800-MB of available hard-disk space, Adobe Reader 6.0.1 and Microsoft DirectX 9.0 software (included on application CD).

Mac system requirements are a PowerPC G3, G4 or G5 processor, Mac OS X 10.2.8 or 10.3, 256-MB of RAM, 200-MB of available hard-disk space.

Included in the box is a $20 Rebate Claim Form valid through April 30, 2005 if you have a previous version of the program (serial number of photocopy of the CD or manual cover required). We strongly dislike this way of handling updates but when a product is so thoroughly rewritten it requires a CD, there really isn't a more efficient way of doing it.

Installation on either system is a breeze. Just pop in the CD and let the installer do all the work. It takes only a few minutes. We do recommend poking around the CD afterwards, though, for the Goodies.

One we especially appreciate is Epson's PIM plug-in to read PIM data stored in an image's Exif header on import to Elements.

Our favorite Photoshop plug-ins seemed happy in the Elements Plug-ins folder, but we didn't comprehensively test them. Other add-ons didn't fare as well, as we explain below.

We did experience one install problem. A second Mac copy installed on our backup system simply failed to launch. We held down the Shift-Option-Command key on launch to rebuild Preferences but that didn't help either. Turned out to be a missing font: Arial.

Before we look at individual features and tools, we should point out some interesting things under the hood. Can you say, 'Hemi?'

First to catch our eye were Keywords. The File Browser includes a Keyword palette to create and apply keywords to photos. Album creates a database of your image collection, storing keywords in the database file, apart from your images (which can be on CD or DVD archives). But where is Elements storing them?

File Info
This dialog shows the keyword in the file itself

It turns out Adobe is using Adobe's Extensible Metadata Platform labeling technology to add keywords to the image file itself (without requiring a database, like Album). XMP also tracks the file's history. And all this travels with the image file so it's available when you use it in, say, InDesign or Acrobat or Illustrator.

Of course, if you change a keyword (say, Peking to Beijing), files that use the old keyword (Peking) won't be updated with the new one (Beijing).

The second thing we found intriguing is 16-bit channel support and Raw file support. We hasten to point out that Canon CRW and Nikon NEF files are, in fact, Raw formats. Apart from Adobe's recently introduced DNG format, there is no standard Raw format. They're all different. Which is why Adobe developed DNG, which Elements 3 supports.

Camera Raw
Various Raw formats displayed in File Browser

We've often discussed the importance of 16-bit channels for making color and tonal corrections to images. In effect, they let you make exposure adjustments after the fact. Under and overexposed shots can actually be corrected if 16-bit channels were captured using your camera's Raw file format. For more on this, see Bruce Fraser's $35 Real World Camera Raw, which takes a look at how 'to set white balance, optimize contrast and saturation, handle noise, correct tint and recover lost detail in images before converting them to another format.'

A Nikon NEF Raw Image
Note the various settings your can tweak as you open the file

We applaud Adobe for supporting 16-bit channels even in Elements, where you might least expect it. We faulted Paint Shop Pro for sticking to 8-bit channels because we expect to see a new generation of tools that require 16-bit channel images to work their magic. This single capability brings a new dimension to digital photography and we're glad to see it in a $99 product, which was the price of the original Camera Raw format plug-in for Photoshop 7.

Support for 16-bit channels doesn't, however, mean channel support. You still can't look at the red, green or blue channel of your image. Likewise, there's no support for CMYK files, just the more common variety RGB images your digicam makes. And you can't manipulate them with Curves, either.

That is, unless you buy Richard Lynch's Hidden Powers of Elements 3, which includes a Curves tool and lets you work with channels and CMYK files. The tools are matched to each version of Elements, as Richard explained to us.

What is microsoft office home and student 2019. 'The tools that came with the book had to be re-mastered,' he said, 'and are all working fine now. They are being released with the new Elements 3 version of the book (http://aps8.com/hppe3.html), on the book's CD. The tool set in the book has been moderately expanded and improved compared to the tool set for Elements 2. Some of the additions are from what was formerly the free tool set.'

The free tools Richard has offered with prior versions (http://hiddenelements.com/freetools.html) were substantial so we're not surprised to hear he's including a few on the new CD. While there are none available for Elements 3 yet, he has plans. 'I am currently working on some conversions of actions that were converted for Elements 2 and I'm building some new tools for Elements 3 users. Once more of those are done, I'll be updating the site to reflect Elements 3 changes and adding free stuff as I have time.'

That's good news. Richard's book ought to be included with every copy of Elements.

The interface has undergone a major face lift. If the old interface seemed borrowed from Photoshop, the new one seems borrowed from Album. Despite our dislike of the complexity of Album's interface, we find it suits Elements very well.

If you want to play around with an image, you have a choice to make: Quick Fix or Standard Edit. Just click on one of the large buttons in the upper right corner to make your selection.

Adobe Elements 3.0

Quick Fix used to be a tool, an awkward one. Now it's an environment. Click on Quick Fix and the right hand side of the screen displays four palettes: General Fixes, Lighting, Color and Sharpen. Help is a click away on any of them and they each have irresistible jelly bean sliders that make you want to play with them. The color slider bars even indicate (with color) what their effect is. Saturation, for example, is gray at the left end and gradually intensifies to something like phosphorescent slime on the right. Hue, too, shows a rainbow of options. There's also an Auto button on each palette, but it's really more fun to play.

In fact, we took an image with an almost monotone blue color cast, clicked on Smart Fix to get something that resembled a bad print, decreased the Saturation and shifted the Hue from magenta to orange to get a perfectly corrected image in only three clicks.

The Windows Version
Standard Edit selected

The Standard Edit interface, with all the bells and whistles, has been improved immensely with the elimination of the old, cramped Tool Well in favor of a set of tabbed palettes that line the right side of the screen. With a click, you can collapse a palette, regaining screen space.

You used to have to dig around in the crammed Well to find the Filters tab, the Effects tab and the Layers tab. Now all three are combined in one palette using a popup menu. That makes a lot more sense.

We were very happy to see the Help text field is still prominently displayed. Help has always been one of the best things about Elements.

The new Reduce Noise filter has three settings to play with. Strength (0-10), Preserve Details (1-255) and Reduce Color Noise (0-100). But even more helpful is its live preview showing you the effect of your settings. Click in the preview and you can also make a quick comparison with the original.

Before
After

This is an important addition, actually. As Dave points out in camera review after camera review, the more pixels that are packed into small sensors, the noisier your images are at sensitivities above ISO 200. ISO 400, he often complains, is unusable for just that reason.

Generally speaking, the bigger the sensor, the better the image. Smaller sensors on prosumer digicams cram in as many sensors as they can to offer resolutions competitive with dSLRs but at the expense of increasing noise. The larger CCDs typically used on dSLRs have sensors that are not as small and consequently have less noise.

Results from the plug-in were pleasing if not thorough. The noise problem is really a bit more complex than it might seem. Take a look at our review of Dfine in the Aug. 8, 2003 issue to learn more about the different kinds of noise that can infect your image.

Previously to remove redeye, you selected a brush and painted it away. Now you use a tool and either click on the redeye or drag a selection around it. You can adjust the pupil size and the amount to darken, both by percent. This is a small change but a welcome one for its improved usability.

Blemishes?

The same might be said of the two healing brushes, one to touch up spots and the other to repair larger areas. Healing brushes resemble the Clone tool, but they're a bit more sophisticated, tapping into the processing power of today's more powerful systems to not clone some aspects of an image. Think of it as being able to paint tone, color and texture without cloning detail from a similar part of the image. The healing brushes are a more usable clone tool.

Any image editing software worth its Save command offers layers but we doubt many people are comfortable applying an adjustment layer or picking a layer mode. Fortunately Elements isn't shy about doing that for you. Click on an Effect and watch Elements go to work. As it does, it tells you what it's doing and you can watch the layers build as it does. It can actually be fun to watch.

But the new Cookie Cutter tool is actually fun to use. You select a shape, of which there are many in categories from Animals to Tiles. Then you can set its options, which include drawing (just by dragging) the unconstrained shape, or in the proportions it was defined with, at the defined size or a fixed size. A checkbox determines if the shape is drawn from the center or the top left. But wait! You can also feather the edge any number of pixels and crop the image. And when you release the mouse button, you can edit the shape outline, rotate it, resize it, whatever you want before the cookie is actually cut, so to speak.

There's more to this version of Elements than we had room for in the newsletter version of this review, so we're going to cover it with updates right here during the upcoming weeks.

Digicams take great pictures and most organizing software now includes rudimentary image editing commands to handle things like rotating the image, fixing redeye and correcting color balance and contrast. But you may find yourself yearning for more.

Image editing doesn't come naturally, however. Bravo to Adobe for building such a comprehensive help system with integrated tutorials and tips. It's among the best training material for image editing we've ever seen.

And with the improved interface, Elements 3.0 encourages you to take your images farther than your camera can. Of course, it includes those rudimentary and automatic fixes most programs offer. But there's also a lot of fun built into this program that makes it a pleasure to play with your images. And even more, under the hood is an engine that is pointed to the future of imaging.

Adobe Premiere Elements 3.0

Reviewed by:Mark Goldstein, April 2007
Published by:Adobe
Requires: Intel Pentium 1.3GHz or faster CPU (3GHz Pentium HD video editing); Windows Vista 32-bit, Windows XP or Media Center XP both w/SP2; 1-1GB RAM, 4.5GB available hard drive space, minimum 1024x768 monitor resolution, DV/i.Link/FireWire/IEEE1394 port and/or USB 2.0 Hi-Speed port for direct video import from connected cameras; display and audio drivers fully compatible with DirectX 9 or later
MSRP: US$99.99

Adobe Premiere Elements 3 is a consumer/prosumer digital video editing and production program designed to ease the process of creating standard definition, high definition and wide screen videos. Premiere Elements 3 is a simpler and easier-to-use version of the Adobe Premiere Pro video editing suite. Although clearly aimed at home users and hobbyists, Premiere Elements 3 just as clearly offers a lot of video editing and production power in a comparatively inexpensive package. The software has the necessary controls and configurations to deal with all of the most popular digital video, audio and bitmap image formats including MPEG-1, MPEG-2, MPEG-4, H.264, DV, AVI, Windows Media, QuickTime, WAV, WMA, Dolby Digital Stereo, Photoshop PSD, JPEG, PNG and DVD.

Competition in the video editing software category has increased dramatically since home consumer and hobbyist digital video editing became a realistic and affordable possibility in the late '90s. Mind you, as of this writing digital video editing is still not as easy as digital photo editing or digital slide show creation. The product competition and consumer choices are formidable. Pinnacle Studio, Cyberlink DVD Suite, Sony Vegas Movie Studio+DVD, ULead Video Studio (a Corel product as of April 2007), Magix Movie Edit Pro, muvee autoProducer, Cyberlink Power Director, Roxio Easy Media Creator Suite and Apple Final Cut Express HD are all being actively developed and compete heavily for consumer attention. An overview of these competitors can be confusing. Apple's Final Cut is owerful, can be difficult to use, and still suffers from occasional crashes. The video editing portion of the Roxio/Sonic Easy Media Creator is based on the lamentable MGI VideoWave product and is lacking in certain video editing functions compared to the rest of this group. Cyberlink Power Director has been popular, albeit feature-limited. muvee autoProducer is unique in its approach to greater automation at the cost of versatility. Magix Movie Edit presents some stability problems, but is comparatively easy to use. ULead Video Studio has always been easier to use than most of the competition, but has never attempted to offer some of the depth and breadth of features found in prosumer and professional suites. Sony Vegas has a big brother that is found, like Adobe Premiere Pro, in a lot of professional video production environments. Cyberlink DVD Suite tries to be a jack-of-all-trades only to end up being plainly functional but limited in all things. Premiere pro update notes. Pinnacle Studio, a product which originally helped define this category of software on consumer desktops, remains one of the most powerful and popular, but suffers from a sometimes difficult installation process and a usability rap held over from previous versions.

Adobe Premiere Elements 3 falls into the home consumer and hobbyist software category, but thankfully without much of the confusing configurations found in the professional products and in previous versions of Premiere Elements itself. Adobe has made great progress in its efforts to make Premiere Elements 3 more usable for some beginners. You'll still have to come to grips with video editing jargon, simply because video editing is a well-defined technology with specific names for specific functions, aspects, actions and features. Premiere Elements 3 works well on many of the standard Intel desktops being offered by all the major computer makers. Any system running Window XP/SP2, Windows Media Center/SP2 or Windows Vista 32-bit, any dual core Intel processor, 1-2GB RAM and a DirectX 9/128MB video card will likely handle all but the largest home video projects with ease. Throughout the review period we found Premiere Elements 3 to be stable and responsive. Most of the testing was done on an Intel E6300 Core 2 Duo running Windows Vista Home Premiere with 1.5GB of DDR2 RAM, and an ATI X1300 Pro PCI-Express video card,

To create a product of this type, the product designers and developers must determine how their chosen feature and function set will be presented to end users of the software. Simply put, the software must be designed with a specific workflow that leads users logically from one task to another, culminating in a completed video production ready for viewing on the computer, or for upload and streaming on the Internet, or for transfer to portable devices (video-enabled mobile phones, video iPod, Sony Playstation Portable which all handle MPEG-4 files), or authoring and burning to DVD. Adobe has succeeded in creating a structured workflow that, once you've taken some time to work through the supplied tutorials, makes sense and is easy to remember. Something beyond beginner computing experience is assumed however, so our advice is that absolute novices at both video editing and Windows PC computing should accumulate some general experience before tackling Premiere Elements 3 or any comparable software.

Adobe Elements 3d

We presented the software to a disparate group of 8 testers (personal friends, business friends and one of our IT managers), each of whom already had several years of experience with digital video cameras and digital video editing software. Each person was asked to either shoot some video with a 3 minute production in mind (any subject) or assemble some existing video clips suitable for a 3 minute production. Our goal for this review was to figure out how long it would take each person to become familiar with Premiere Elements 3, and to also observe the speed and effectiveness of the software. Over a period of three weeks, we booked several two hour appointments with each person to provide enough time with the software to work through the tutorials, read the printed guide, play around with controls and settings, and generally familiarize themselves with the product. We then booked an editing & production appointment with each person and gave them a couple of hours to edit and produce their 3 minute videos. The results were excellent overall. Six of the testers produced good home videos; two produced excellent videos that were genuinely entertaining and funny with a professional look and feel. Every tester needed at least an hour with the tutorials and guide to gain some basic familiarity with Adobe's workflow approach. After that was accomplished, the natural abilities of each tester determined how long it took to become comfortable with the software—times ranged from as little as one extra hour up to six hours. The tester who required the most time with the learning curve also ended up creating one of the best videos. Video editing is not like word processing. Most people can't just start the software and immediately produce something. If you understand this before getting into digital video editing of any kind, you'll be much more patient with the learning process and ultimately have a much more satisfying and successful creative experience.

Taken together, the videos we created made use of almost every single feature and function in Adobe Premiere Elements 3. Some of the testers captured video directly from several different DV cameras (Canon, Sony and Panasonic models); some loaded MPEG-2 or AVI files directly from portable hard drives, USB flash drives or DVD. Everybody made use of individual or combined audio elements including background music tracks, narration, sound effects and of course recorded audio. Two of the testers used HDV capture from Sony HD cameras. Some of the productions were overloaded with needlessly confusing transition effects; some used only straight cuts from scene to scene. Some used elaborate titles and excessive onscreen text; some used lead and closing titles only. One production was a dramatic and quite beautiful time lapse of snow melting on the banks of a slowly thawing stream, the water moving faster and faster throughout the video, all of which was accompanied by the last three minutes of the William Tell Overture. My other favorite was a jumpy, jerky video montage of a child's birthday party containing everything from a couple of slightly out-of-focus moments to a curious little doofus with absolutely huge brown eyes who managed to poke the lens with a cake-covered finger as he peered directly into the camera. People are really creative and I've got to say that having the opportunity to view each production at the end of the review period was worth the effort a dozen times over. I think that if we don't preserve these views of life and the world around us by spending a little time with some good software, life in general might be a little less entertaining.

Native DV/HDV camera support and control is very good. Capturing footage and building your movie in the visual Sceneline is quick and intuitive. The My Project panel provides a place to drag, drop and rearrange thumbnails of clips, transitions and effects—everything you're collecting for use in a project. Dragging one scene onto another in the Premiere Elements Monitor window creates picture-in-picture (PiP) effects among other things, and was used in one of our productions to narrate a silent main clip. The Monitor window is also a significant usability improvement, offering in-place editing and previewing which didn't exist in previous versions of Premiere Elements. Audio editing, adding narration at any point in a production or scene is easy and the results are very good.


Cons: Adobe's installation process can be a bit bold. I don't want a desktop icon, but the Premiere Elements installer doesn't offer a choice. I also want to modify the default storage folders for video clips, audio clips, bitmap images and productions because I prefer to use an external hard drive or a second internal hard drive for data storage (and easier backup). Manually changing storage locations is possible but the configuration could be easier. Although clearly aimed at home consumers and hobbyists, Adobe Premiere Elements 3.0 is best learned by working through Adobe's straightforward tutorials provided in the online help system and the printed guide. Every video editing program offers its own approach to workflow, and Adobe certainly wants you to follow the Premiere Elements workflow very closely. That means the software is not something that digital video novices can dive quickly into without preparation. You'll have a much easier time of it by recognizing that Premiere Elements 3 is not just a collection of features and functions, but rather a carefully organized workflow that can be extremely creative and productive if you follow its rules. Adobe acrobat won t save pdf. Support for AMD processors can be inconsistent, so before purchasing we advise downloading the Premiere Elements 3 trial version to try on your AMD-based PC.

Adobe elements 2020

Pros: Adobe Premiere Elements 3 installs lots of templates and source files to help you practice creating and producing videos, helping you become familiar and comfortable with the software in a short period of time. The 255 page printed user guide contains a fold-out Getting Started card which is very handy for beginners. The guide is well organized, clearly written, carefully edited and easy to understand. Results from both the tutorial materials and our own source video files in standard definition and HD were excellent. As long as you've got the computing and video horsepower to deal with the file formats and production resolutions you prefer, Premiere Elements 3 will provide you with the results you expect. Being able to jump back and forth between the Timeline and Sceneline is a welcome improvement to the user interface; it's convenient and provides a straightforward way to edit projects in different ways. If you don't like or have difficulty understanding the concept of timeline-based video editing, you can do almost everything in the Premiere Elements Monitor window instead. Once you understand the Premiere Elements 3 workflow, digital video editing becomes almost effortless. Adobe has continuously improved Premiere Elements since it was introduced a few years ago, providing an increasingly user-friendly experience with each new release. Adobe continues to find ways to make a technically intensive process easier and more approachable. Premiere Elements 3 is the best version of this program so far. Recommended.





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