First Look
Photoshop 7.0, Is It Worth The Upgrade

A browser is a real convenience when you are hunting for an image file you want to open. Also,having access now to the metadata (EXIF file header) digital camera data is a great advantage. However, browsers for photo applications have been around for years, so why did it take so long or Adobe to provide this convenience to Photoshop users?
Photos © 2001, David B. Brooks, All Rights Reserved

When I read the general description of what was new in Photoshop 7.0, my expectations were high that what I would experience would justify a full upgrade number from 6.0 to 7.0. After whining to the Photoshop team about poor retouching tools for the last couple of years, I was anxious to see if they had listened.

There are four features in this upgrade that are new and which relate to the digital darkroom and photography. As usual, most of what is new is for illustrators and web page building. This always puzzles me since 85 percent of the illustrations that are published are photographs, compared to relatively few that are created from scratch by an illustrator. Usually what is new for photographers are tools that are needed to help work with digital photographs. But I was very disappointed once I tried using the four new features that are photographically useful, or rather should be.

New Browser
The first change is a new browser that opens a window of thumbnails of images in any folder you can access from Photoshop. The browser reveals all of the text data in the file header, including identification of the embedded profile. For digital camera files, the metadata in the file header includes the date and time the image was made as well as the settings used to make the exposure. All of this is great. But other than the metadata header information, other image-editing applications like Micrograx Picture Publisher have had an opening browser for at least a half dozen years, so what took Adobe so long to include such a convenience in Photoshop?

Automatic image adjustment features are like autoexposure on a camera. They only work effectively with typical, average subjects. If the subject is unusual and should be adjusted specifically for one attribute, like skin tones in a face close-up, and the background is a strong color, Auto Color will shift the skin tones to something way out of the ballpark.

Auto Color
Another much ballyhooed new tool is Auto Color. Now I have grave doubts about auto-adjust anything photographic because it is based on the false premise that all subjects/photographs are the same. In other words, the software cannot tell whether the subject is a black cat in a coal mine or a white horse in a blizzard, so how can it make an automatic and appropriate adjustment when it doesn't know what it is adjusting? In my experience all images are unique and an ideal adjustment must be done with intelligent consideration of what is appropriate for that subject and the way it is illuminated.

To back-up this opinion I made some simple tests. In the past, doing tests of new and different films I always made some bracketed exposures of the ubiquitous MacBeth Color Checker, so I dug out a few of these made on different films and made raw scans of them just adjusting the gamut in the pre-scan. I made two copies of each Color Checker image, and then proceeded to manually adjust the colors using the Levels dialog's eyedropper tool to set the highlight and shadow as well as the mid-tone grays to remove any color cast. Then, on the second copy, I used Auto Color to do the same thing.

Well, the Color Checker has a pretty typical, even distribution of colors, and it did a good job adjusting the colors by removing any color cast in highlights or shadows. But it must assume all images scanned have parallel density curves for each of the RGB channels, because it did not remove color casts caused by the RGB curves not remaining parallel in the mid tones.

There remains essentially only one useable retouching tool in Photoshop, the Clone Stamp. The Healing Brush is a modified rubber stamp that is intended to make using it easier, but at the cost of being very slow and often inappropriate. It is not what is needed, and what is needed, Adobe has ignored.

I then selected some scans of portraits made in the studio against different colored backgrounds. When I manually adjust color in a raw scan of a portrait, I ignore the background color as well as the color of clothing and adjust the color values to obtain the best rendition of skin tones, letting all other parts of the image colors fall where they may. Of course, Auto Color does not know the image is a portrait, so it assumes it should have a typical distribution of color and reads a whole bunch of color from clothing, and or background, and adjusts the image according to the overall color content. This resulted in skin tones that are way off from what they should be. In other words, don't expect Auto Color to work unless you make stereotypical images of trite, ordinary subjects. If you make images which vary from the usual, Auto Color will not recognize the uniqueness of the subject (like a high key wedding portrait) and will make adjustments assuming it is a stereotypical snapshot subject. Adobe needs to understand that no amount of programming can substitute for the skill that comes from knowledge and experience and a critically trained eye. That is the only way you obtain image excellence. Programming just reduces everything to the lowest common denominator of mediocrity.

Retouching Tools
My highest hopes were quickly dashed when I found out that the new retouching tools were another attempt to substitute programming for knowledge and skill. The "Healing Brush" is just a version of the old, familiar and inefficient Clone Stamp, adding a bunch of background processing that slows it down to a crawl even on a new Mac G4 with 1GB of RAM. The idea is that you set the Healing Brush's pick up point at a place where skin tones are ideal and then clone that into an area that has wrinkles or a blemish, and the underlying lighting and color will be retained. Well, in many instances, that is not what is even needed.

Wedding and portrait photographers will find the modification that now allows a Picture Package to contain more than one image selection a major advantage.

For instance, in shadows under the eyes, a frequent area that requires retouching, most of the time the skin is discolored with a bluish or greenish tinge of color and the light reflects oddly from that abnormal skin. So, I would want to pick up color from a normal area of complexion tone and clone it into the shadows under the eyes rather than have the color and lighting appear the same as before. In another instance I want to clone in normal, peaches and cream skin tones to a dark, brownish mole I want to remove, so I don't want that dark, brownish color to be retained.

If the Adobe Photoshop programmers had consulted someone like myself, who has retouched thousands of photographs on both analog film and paper as well as digitally, and watched how I work and asked what kind of tools are needed, they might have provided some that are useful and increase efficiency. So really no improvement has been provided, just a modification of the old Clone Stamp that slows the process down so much that it would take all day to accomplish what I can do in less than an hour. In under an hour I will make from 1000 to 2000 clicks with my Wacom mouse-if I used the Healing Brush it would fall way behind and never catch up. I feel that what is offered is unrealistic and is not what is needed.

Years ago, Zsoft PhotoPaint had almost a dozen different brushes ideally configured for retouching. Unfortunately, when Corel bought the program they did not understand retouching either and did not keep most of them, and my opinion is that neither Zsoft nor Corel has the excellent color handling and superb engine under their applications that makes Photoshop number one. But maybe because they are number one, and have little if any competition, they think they know better than the user what the user needs and wants. But from the perspective of an old-time master retoucher, the Healing Brush and related Patch Tool miss the mark by a mile, and tools we could use and have suggested are ignored because apparently Adobe thinks they know better what we should want or need.

Picture Package
The last of the four new photographic features is a modification of the Automated Function, Picture Package. This will be much appreciated by portrait and wedding photographers who are doing their own printing. Now, for any configuration and paper size selected, you can select different images to be printed within a package. For instance, if you have a package on 8.5x11 paper with one 5x7 and eight wallets, the 5x7 can be a different image than the wallets. Once you activate the Automated Function > and select the layout and paper size, the open image in Photoshop will fill into all of the spaces. You then click on one of the frames and browse and point to another image file and it will be inserted in that frame. This new flexibility will make it possible to satisfy any combination of print size packages from any of the poses that were taken during the sitting or wedding.

Why The Upgrade?
The main reason apparently for the upgrade designation from Photoshop 6.0 to Photoshop 7.0 is that 7.0 now runs native in Mac OS X. For many photographers that is, for now, of dubious value, as many devices, like some scanners with SCSI interfaces and TWAIN drivers, lack any support for in OS X. So, my bottom line is that unless the new Picture Package feature is essential there is no good reason to upgrade. Until I see what is done with the next version of Photoshop Elements I'm going to hang with Mac OS 9.1 and Photoshop 6.0 and save $149, thank you. By the way, instead of Auto Color Adobe would have been wiser just to put the Remove Color Cast Tool from Elements into 7.0. It is much more useful and effective.

For more information, contact Adobe Systems Inc. at (800) 833-6687 or visit their web site, www.adobe.com.

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