In the example above, I selected the original photo on the left, clicked on the Effects tab and selected Graduated Tint. It automatically uses blue and covers the top 1/2 of the picture, using a feathered edge at the bottom.(Member Tutorial Video:Picasa’s 12 Effects)
Usually, the automatic settings are just perfect for a touch of blue sky. You can, if you want something more dramatic, change the color, change the amount of the photo that's covered, and change how the bottom edge appears. In the example above, I increased the darkness of the blue a little to be sure you can see it.
As with all Picasa fixes and effects, if you don't like it, just undo
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Always good stuff. Thanks. I'm trying to teach Sr's some basic editing and your tips certainly help.
ReplyDeleteYes, I've done this. The only problem is, the blue graduates into the steeple of the church as well, dulling it out.
ReplyDeleteWish Picassa had tint tools that didn't destroy white highlights.
Stan, yes it's true that the blue tint covers everything across the picture. So, in this example the bell tower's white is tinted blue. This feature should be used very lightly.
ReplyDelete[...] covered this feature before … but I don’t think I used a very good example in that article, so I’m going to revisit [...]
ReplyDelete