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Documentation & User Guides | Fotoware

Editing images with the Fotoware plugin

The image editor is a general-purpose tool for editing and adjusting images. It has some quite effective tools for filtering out dust and reducing image noise, and it can be used to crop, rotate, and perform many types of color correction and processing that are useful to produce a good result. The toolbar and menus give access to all operations that can be carried out in the editor.

Checking out a picture for editing

Select the picture in the grid and choose Edit on the action bar. Depending on your choice of web browser, you may have to click on the .fwc file downloaded when you execute the command.

Setting image size

By clicking on the Size button on the toolbar, you can change the document size and the physical size of the image. To only change the document size, often referred to as the file’s print size, make sure that the Resample image option is not selected. Then, enter new values in the Document size fields. Note that the Width and Height values are interrelated to preserve the proportions of the original image.

To change the pixel size of the image, you must first enable image resampling by selecting the Resample image checkbox. This will allow you to change the values in the Pixel dimensions field, namely Width, Height, and/or File size. Note that even when resampling images, the width and height values are relative to each other to retain the original width/height ratio of the image. Hence, changing the value in either the Height or Width field will change the value in the other field correspondingly.

What the Auto button does

The Auto button has two modes of operation. When image resampling is disabled, you can click it to specify a target screen resolution and a quality requirement, and the print size will be adjusted accordingly based on the physical amount of data available in the image.

With resampling enabled, you can select Auto and set a target screen resolution and required quality value so that the print size you have set will be retained, and the image will be resampled so that it contains the necessary amount of data to give the required quality with the specified print size.

Adding metadata to the Image

Select Metadata to open the metadata editor and add information to the image. The editor used is the same as the one associated with the archive from which the file was checked out.

Adjusting curves

Select Curves on the toolbar to open the Curves dialog. Essentially, both Curves and Levels can be used to adjust the image contrast and set black-and-white points; which method you choose is largely a matter of preference. The X-axis in the Curves diagram represents a range of image brightness from black to white, while the Y-axis shows how bright the corresponding pixel in the X-axis will be in the resulting image. To adjust the black point in the image, click and drag the dot in the lower left corner along to the right, leaving its Y-axis value unchanged. Similarly, you can set the image white point by dragging the dot in the upper right corner to the left along the X axis without changing its output value along the Y axis. You can click anywhere along the diagonal line and drag it to change the mapping of pixel values, or you can enter an input value and its corresponding output mapping. By default, the Curves dialog displays the Master color channel, letting you adjust the overall image levels, but you can choose the red, green, or blue color channel from the drop-down list for individual adjustment. To remove a point on the curve, click it and then drag it outside the Curves dialog. If you are used to working with CMYK values where zero corresponds to white, you can toggle the white/black setting by clicking on the gradient grayscale bar along the X-axis.

By clicking on the white and black arrows in the middle of the gradient field along the X-axis you can reverse the black/white point on the scale. Also, the Curves dialog has four buttons:

Reset: Resets the adjustments that you have made to curves.

Load: load a predefined curve file from a file.

Save: Save the current curve settings to a file.

Predefined: Click this button to choose from four predefined curve settings.

Adjusting image levels

To adjust image levels, click on the Levels button on the toolbar. This will bring up the Levels dialog. By choosing a color channel (or Master for all channels combined) and dragging the sliders, you can adjust the image levels in the shadows, mid-tones, and highlights. You can also enter the values in the text fields above the histogram. To automatically adjust levels, select Auto. You can now perform automatic level adjustment with or without color balance preservation. If you choose not to preserve the color balance, the levels for all three color channels will be adjusted individually, whereas choosing color balance preservation will adjust the combined. Note that choosing Auto levels from the Image menu adjusts levels without preserving the color balance.

Digital flash

In the Levels dialog, y ou can also equalize the image using the Digital Flash function. See below for more information on how to use the digital flash.

Adjusting colors

Select Color Adjustment button to open the color adjustment palette. You can use this palette to change the colors of the entire image or a selection that you have drawn using the Lasso tool. Use the top (gray) bar to adjust the image's overall color balance. Select one of the five gray buttons to adjust the balance of shadows, mid-tones, and highlights in five levels. The three other rows are useful for removing the color cast and adjusting the red, green, and blue levels. To adjust, press and hold your mouse button on one of the five sliders on the appropriate row. The popup scale will indicate the color and contrast change when moving the slider.

Adjusting hue and saturation

Click on the Hue & Saturation button on the toolbar. A separate dialog will let you adjust the hue, color saturation, and luminance level of the image. These values can be adjusted for the Master channel, or you can pick a color channel using the dropdown list to adjust it individually.

Using the digital flash

The digital flash can be applied by clicking on the Digital Flash button on the toolbar, by clicking on the Digital Flash button in the Levels dialog (Click the Levels button on the toolbar to bring it up) or by applying it in an image action (see below).

The digital flash feature equalizes image levels to make shadows brighter and reduce the brightness of highlights. There are three different ways to apply the digital flash function slightly differently: When using the Digital Flash button on the toolbar in the image editor, you can apply three levels of flash – Strong, Normal, or Weak. This button divides the image into four equally large fields, and flash is applied to each area separately. If you want greater control of the flash, use the Digital Flash button in the Levels dialog or set up an image action (see below). That way, you can also choose the intensity of the application of flash as well as the number of fields the image should be split into before applying the flash. For images with great contrasts between highlight and shadows, it is usually a good idea to divide the image into many fields when applying the flash, even though this will require slightly more time for processing.

Using the Pixelate tool

By selecting and choosing the Pixelate tool, you can blur details in the picture you want to obscure. It may, for instance, be used to remove sensitive information from a picture. Using the little, You can choose from three levels of pixelation, three levels of blurring, and three different color masks that will make the selected part of the image unintelligible.

Adjusting contrast using SmartContrast™

In addition to adjusting levels or curves to improve image contrast, a special filter called SmartContrast combines several techniques to produce the best possible result. The filter has no settings; it can be applied by clicking on the little arrow on the Image Edit Actions button (the one next to the Metadata button) and choosing SmartContrast™.

Adjusting image sharpness with SmartSharp™

There is also a special filter for improving image sharpness. The SmartSharp™ filter can be applied by selecting the arrow on the Image Edit Actions button and choosing SmartSharp™. Essentially, SmartSharp™ analyzes the image to determine whether sharpening is necessary. By creating a custom image action, you can configure the filter so control when sharpening is applied and the amount of sharpening that is applied. (See Image Edit Actions below for more info.)

Invert the current selection

If you have made one or more selections using the lasso tool, the selection can be inverted by choosing Invert selection. The SmartClean filter will then be applied to the area(s) outside the original selection(s)

Advanced parameters

Select Show advanced parameters to manually adjust the Luminance reduction level, Luminance low frequency, Color low frequency, and Sharpening.

Red-eye reduction

To remove red eyes in an image, use the lasso tool to make the selection, then click on the Fix red-eye button to have FotoWeb Desktop apply its automatic red-eye reduction filter.

Rotating images

Images can be rotated in steps of 90 degrees using the green buttons to the right on the toolbar. The rightmost rotation button is used to rotate the image 180 degrees. Remember that selections made using the crop tool can be rotated freely by placing the pointer outside the crop frame and clicking and dragging the mouse to rotate the crop frame.

The Tools on the Toolbar

Zoom level

Click on the Zoom level button to choose a Zoom level. To adapt the image to the screen size, select Fit in window.

Arrow tool

This tool is used to select lassos you have drawn to make selective adjustments to the image. For example, if you want to delete a particular selection, select the arrow tool, click on the selection you want to delete, and press the Delete key on the keyboard. You can also right-click the image to open a context menu with useful options.

Zoom

Use the zoom tool to zoom in and out. (Press the Alt key while clicking to zoom out.) You can click on a particular point in the image to zoom in on it, or you can click and drag a frame around the area you want to enlarge. The current zoom level will be indicated on the Zoom level button to the far left of the toolbar.

Move / Pan

Having zoomed in, you can use the hand-shaped move tool to move the image inside the image frame. By pressing or releasing the Ctrl button, you can easily switch between the move and the zoom tool. (Press Ctrl-Alt to zoom out.)

Crop

To crop the image, select this tool and drag a frame across the area you wish to keep. If a soft crop frame has been applied to the image using the Crop function in the main program window, this crop frame will be displayed when activating the crop tool. To rotate and adjust the crop frame, place the pointer outside the crop frame and click/drag the crop frame to rotate it. If you want to align the crop frame to compensate for a slightly tilted picture, look for any straight horizontal or vertical lines in the picture – a horizon, for example. Then press the Shift key while clicking and dragging the pointer along this line to adjust the crop frame accordingly. To move a crop frame after creating it, place the pointer inside the cropped area (the pointer will change to a hand), then click and drag the crop frame with the mouse. Finally, to apply the crop, double-click inside the crop frame.

Clone

The clone tool can remove smaller scratches and dust in the image. Press the Alt key while clicking on the area to clone, then release the Alt key and click on the target area to paint. The clone tool has two settings that appear in a separate small panel when the tool is selected. Clone size refers to the size of the area to clone. When you pick an area to clone, the size of the little ring that appears will indicate the size of the clone area. The Transparency setting lets you choose to what extent the target area should be transparent through the cloned layer. To fully erase the original content of the target area, set the Transparency level to zero.

Dodge

The Dodge tool lets you easily lighten up parts of an image by painting with your mouse. When you start painting, FotoWeb Desktop will only modify the same pixels once. This means that if you happen to paint across the same area twice, the pixels will not become increasingly lighter (provided that you don’t release the mouse button and start painting the same area again). When using either the Dodge or the Burn tool, a palette lets you set these values:

Tool size: The size of the area to which you are applying the dodge or burn effect.

Exposure: The intensity of the dodge or burn applied to the area.

Hardness: Increasing the hardness level will make the dodge or burn tool produce more pronounced edges in the areas where the tool is applied. Reducing hardness, on the other hand, increases the “feather” effect to give smoother edges.

Range: Using this dropdown list, you can choose where the dodge or burn should be applied: Highlights, Mid-tones, or Shadows. For example, if you choose Shadows, you can dodge dark areas to make them lighter without affecting neighboring areas that are already quite bright.

Burn

The Burn tool lets you easily darken parts of an image by painting with your mouse. When you start painting, FotoWeb Desktop will only modify the same pixels once. This means that if you happen to paint across the same area twice, the pixels will not become increasingly darker (provided that you don’t release the mouse button and start painting the same area again). When using either the Dodge or the Burn tool, a palette lets you set these values:

Tool size: The size of the area to which you are applying the dodge or burn effect.

Exposure: The intensity of the dodge or burn applied to the area.

Hardness: Increasing the hardness level will make the dodge or burn tool produce more pronounced edges in the areas where the tool is applied. Reducing hardness, on the other hand, increases the “feather” effect to give smoother edges.

Range: Using this dropdown list you can choose where the dodge or burn should be applied: Highlights, Mid-tones, or Shadows. For example, if you choose Highlights, you can burn bright areas to make them darker without affecting neighboring areas that are already quite dark.

Lasso / Selection

If you want to color-correct only parts of an image, use the Lasso tool to select that area. When you select the Lasso tool, you can choose the type of lasso you would like from the dropdown list right next to it. Choose between a freehand, polygon, ellipse, or rectangle-shaped lasso.

To make a selection, draw a line around the area you want to adjust. You can subtract from the selected area by drawing a new selection. Place the pointer on the selection line if you want to change an existing selection. A plus sign (+) will be shown next to the pointer to indicate that you can modify the selection. Draw a new line by clicking and dragging the mouse, and release the mouse button after connecting it with the existing selection. You can now edit your selection by adjusting its color balance or using the Auto-Adjustment profiles. Press and hold Ctrl-Spacebar on the keyboard to compare the edited image with the original.

The lasso feather setting

When a lasso mode has been chosen, select the Feather button next to it to add feathering when modifying the selection. The feather makes it possible to soften the effect of, e.g., color adjustment toward the outer edges of the selected area so that the color-adjusted area won’t be so easily distinguishable from the surrounding area. When the feather is selected, it has a separate dialog with these options:

Feather size: Sets the size of the surrounding area when modifying the selection, for example, by adjusting its color balance.

Show feather: By deselecting this option, the feather outline will not be shown. The feather effect is still enabled, however.

Feather on the inside: Select this option to apply the feather inside the selected area instead of outside.

Color info picker

The color info picker can read out the color information of a certain pixel or an area in the image. When the tool is active, a little dialog called Picker shows the pixel color where the mouse pointer is hovering in the Current column. You can click the mouse button to “store” the color values in the Click column. To get an average color readout from an area, click and drag a frame around the desired area, and FotoWeb Desktop will display the average values in the Click column.

Set Black point

To set the black point in the image, click on the darkest spot in the image or drag a frame over it. FotoWeb Desktop will set the darkest spot within the selected area to black.

Set Gray point

If your image contains an area you know is supposed to be neutral gray, you can select this area using the Set Gray tool. FotoWeb Desktop will then adjust the color cast in this area and correct all the other colors in the image accordingly.

Set White point

To set the white point in the image, click on the completely white spot or drag a frame across it. FotoWeb Desktop will then set the whitest spot within that area to white.