Digital Photography with FxFoto - A Quick Tour
What you
need
First, you need some basic materials - software, photos and
a digital kit. For software, FxFoto Creative Edition offers the all the tools
you will need to create layouts. FxFoto Creative Edition comes with nine
digital kits and a huge number of background papers created by designers at
Scrap Outside the Box www.scrapoutsidethebox.com
and by Clara Wallace of Matter of Scrap www.matterofscrap.com
Requires
Windows 98/2000/ME/XP, 256 MB Ram (512MB Ram recommended)
Quick
tour of FxFoto
Here is what FxFoto looks like when you are using it. So
let's take a quick tour around so you know where things are located.
Upper toolbar pane

Folder pane
Main pane
There are three main areas of FxFoto Creative Edition which
we often call panes
Folder
pane (on the left)
which contains all the folders plus a timeline
Main
pane (on the right)
which is where we work on photos or collages
Upper toolbar
pane (on the top)
which is where all the tools are located
In the screen shot above, you can see an open photo in the
Main pane. In the folder pane, some folders are closed and some are open. The
folders with green backgrounds, like the Party folder above, are digital kits.
Let's take a closer look at the Upper Toolbar Pane.
In the Upper Toolbar Pane are all the various tools
for FxFoto Creative Edition - there are lots and lots of cool things to do and
we will be going through this step by step! This pane always remains open so
you have access to all your tools all the time.
The upper pane has four areas. On the far left are a number
of commands which open up wizards. These wizards are designed to help you
through a process such as printing or uploading. There are wizards for
Collages, Upload, Print, Email, Viewer, Import, Search and Folders.
In the middle of the toolbar are the tools which make up
most of the upper pane. Each area such as Correct or Crop may contain multiple
index tabs labeled with more detailed tools. For instance, the Correct has
been selected above. In Correct, you will find Improve Image, Remove Red Eye,
Remove Blemish, Clone Brush, Color Brush, White Balance and Filter Effects.
When you click on these tabs, say for instance, Remove Red Eye, a new box opens
with all the remove red eye adjustments. Here below is the Remove Red Eye
box.

It would be impossible to go through each box one by one and
even if you watch us demonstrate it, it would be tough to remember how to use
everything! So each and every box has a Help button.
In the box above, Help is located in the lower right hand
corner. Clicking on the Help will bring you directly to that specific section
of the Help file. So here, clicking on Help would bring you to the section on
Remove Red Eye which explains all the settings and how to use them. You don't
have to search through the whole Help file looking for how to use Remove Red
Eye - the instructions are right there for you.
Here's a
bit of a breakdown as to what each of the main categories of tools do
Correct
Improve
Image (includes Auto Improve and spot lightening/darkening)
Remove Red
Eye
Remove
Blemish
Clone Brush
(allows you to cover over unwanted areas)
Color Brush
(recolor a photo or part of it, also changes opaqueness)
White
Balance
Filter
Effects (contains a myriad of special effects - watercolor, sepia, B&W etc.)
Crop
Oval (oval
shape with or without feathering)
Rectangle (square
or rectangle with or without feathering)
Pull or Adjust
Pattern (crop in all sorts of edge shapes - waves, torn paper, bumps)
Cutters
Library (crop in cookie cutter shapes like horse, butterfly, and letters)
Frame
All sorts
of frames from simple to ornate
Text
Dialog Balloons
Text boxes
(captions, titles and text within a photo or collage; use any font)
Draw
Pens (straight,
dashed, dotted lines of any width)
File Stamp
(use any image element as a stamp)
Clip Stamp
(stamp images from your clipboard)
Eyedropper
(to pick up a color from an element or photo)
Slide
Slide
Settings (controls for making slide shows)
Special
Effects (transition effects between slides)
Tour Panning
(more slide effects)
Image Click
Link
Info
Picture
Description (enter keywords, descriptions (kit name, designer etc.)
Image
Object (advanced tools for object placement)
Image
Placement
Add Shadow
(create shadows to make elements 3D)
Mouse
mouse drag
modes
Navigation
Buttons
On the right of the upper pane is the navigation joystick,
Undo and Redo arrows, Collage add button, and speed controls
The [+] and [-] allow you to zoom in and out of your photo
or layout. Zooming in lets you get very close to inspect a detail. In FxFoto,
the zoom is continuous so you aren't limited to certain levels. When you are
clone brushing a tight area, it really helps to very zoomed in so you can make
you edit invisible. For digital scraping, making a paper clip or charm look
real involves zooming in and using the color brush to make part of the element
transparent.
Sometimes it is nice to zoom out and see how your layout
looks from a distance - the digital equivalent to stepping back and looking at
your work.
The arrows surrounding the [+/-] let you move around your
photo or layout. It is something like moving over your photo as if you were in
a balloon flying over it! This lets you look at your whole photo or LO from
any zoom level without having to zoom in and out again. The slide bar lets you
set your speed - you can zoom in and out really fast if you like! If your mouse
has a wheel, then rolling that will let you zoom in and out too.
The Undo and Redo arrows are just below the slide bar.
The Collage Add button is used to add more than one photo to
the main pane to create a collage. It will automatically be depressed if you
are making some types of collages.
Picture Information This is the last area of the upper
pane on the far right. Here you will find all sorts of information about the
picture like pixel size, camera used, the folder in which it is located etc.
Now let's
gets some photos into FxFoto so we can try it out!
Importing
Photos into FxFoto
You may import photos into FxFoto from a number of different
sources - your camera, a scanner, a CD or from other places in your computer.
So if you have photos in My Pictures, you may easily use them in FxFoto.
When you first install,l FxFoto asks you whether you would
like it to scan your computer and find all your photos. If you have a lot of
photos, then this may take a long time and you may end up with thousands of
photos in FxFoto. While you may eventually decide you want all your photos in
FxFoto, it is sometimes better not to let it scan. You can always do a full
system scan if you want later.
Importing
from your Camera
1. First, take some pictures! If you are just learning to use FxFoto, just
take some pictures around your house or yard so that you won't have to worry
about experimenting on them. After you have taken one or more pictures,
connect your digital camera's cable to your computer. You must usually turn the
camera on and may need to set the mode to transfer. Follow your camera's
instructions and make sure that you have installed its driver software on your
computer first.
2. In FxFoto, press the
toolbar button.
3. Choose a Target
Folder Name by typing a new name into the first dialog of the Import
Pictures Wizard.
4. Make sure the
Camera or device button is pressed. If needed, click
on the camera in the associated list to highlight it. If it does not appear,
make sure you have your camera turned on and have selected its transfer mode and then try Import again.
5. Press
the
button and FxFoto reads available
photo thumbnails from the camera
6. Choose
the camera photos to be imported. Photos with green
tags in their upper-right corner
will be imported. Click on a photo to show it enlarged on the right. Click as
needed to turn off or on the green include tag. Once a photo has been selected
and enlarged on the right, click Rotate Left or Rotate Right if
needed. You can also choose Keywords to be remembered for the photo by
clicking on the desired words or phrases. Press the New button to add a
new phrase to list of available keywords. Press Apply All to apply the
current photo's keywords to all imported photos.
7. Press
the
button again and choose the photos
to be erased from the camera. Photos to be erased are marked with red
tags. Some camera interfaces do not allow the
computer to erase photos and this step may be skipped.
8. Press
and the selected photos are copied
from the camera to a new FxFoto left-pane folder.
Importing
from My Pictures
Click on the Import button with the camera icon. Instead of
Camera or device, click on Scan local folders at the bottom of the dialog box.
Then click on Browse to locate the file that you want to import, then click
Scan. Your pictures will be in a folder that has the same name as the one you
scanned. Don't worry you can rename and re-organize your folders later if you
want.
Now we have everything we need to have some serious FUN!
When you first start using FxFoto Creative Edition, use some
‘junk' photos - photos that you really don't care about. That way you can try
all sorts of things without worrying about losing a photo. But FxFoto Creative
Edition keeps a backup of your original photos, so don't worry too much!
Editing a
Photo
Often the difference between a so-so photo and a great one
is just a matter of editing. This, of course, is the beauty of digital. With
your computer, you can edit your photos at home. What used to take hours in a
darkroom, now takes only seconds. Remove unwanted objects, crop to emphasis a
subject, lighten or darken a photo and change it into black and white,
watercolor or a sketch all can be done with the click of a mouse. How cool is
that?
Remember that you just click a photo in the left pane folder
to open it into the main window for editing.
Let's get started by looking at some of the FxFoto Creative
Edition tools in detail.
Correct
Under this tool, you will find a myriad of other tools to
fix and enhance your photos. Here, you will find Improve Image, Remove Red
Eye, Remove Blemish, Clone Brush, Color Brush, White Balance and Filter
Effects. Let's learn how to use each one.

Improve
Image
When a photo is too dark or too light, a lot of detail can
be lost. Even if you have adjusted your camera for the light conditions,
sometimes the photos are still too light or too dark. In the days of film, you
had no choice but to toss the photo or just deal with it. But now, you can
correct them. Auto Improve which you use by simply clicking on the Auto
Improve button, corrects the whole photo and you can keep clicking on it to see
if it gets better. Clicking on the Undo button will take you back a step at a
time.
On the left below is a photo of a topiary animal which was
taken against a bright sky. Because of shadow, the details of the legs in the
lower right corner are missing! On the right is the same photo with Auto
Improve applied. The legs have reappeared, making it a much clearer photo.

You can also choose to lighten or darken just a small area
of the photo using the Circle Click Tool. Here is the same photo but instead
of using Auto Improve, the Circle Click tool has been used to lighten just the
body. Now compare the photo below to the Auto Improve one above. In the Auto
Improve, the sky was lightened along with the whole picture so it appears less
blue and more washed out. With the Circle Click tool, the sky remains a bright
blue rather than being washed out because only that small area was lightened.

There are also manual controls for adjusting brightness,
contrast and Gamma as well as color balance controls. As you get more into
digital photography you may find these very useful for modifying photos and
finely adjusting the lighting.
Remove
Red Eye
How many perfectly good photos have been ruined by the red
eye? Although digital cameras often have a setting to reduce red-eye, it is by
no means perfect. So how do you get the red out?
Below is a screen shot with the left eye corrected and the
right with red eye. First, click on the Remove Red Eye tab and then, zoom in a
bit. Using the slider on the left, make your circle about the size of the red
eye. Then place over the eye and right click.

Remove
Blemish
This tool is similar to Remove Red Eye except it is meant
for removing small areas. Make your circle a bit bigger than the blemish and
add some feathering to the edges and it will blend right in.
Clone
Brush
Sometimes the camera sees what we do not see. It records
the world accurately but our eye is on capturing the subject and so we often don't
see things like telephone poles and trash on the ground. But the camera does
and so we are left with a less than perfect photo. With the magic of a clone
brush, you can get rid of distracting objects like telephone wires.
Take a good look at the two photos below. The one on the
left is the original photo - complete with all sorts of stuff lying on the
carpet which is very distracting. After all the idea was to capture an orphan
in the cast of Annie and not her water bottle and bags! In addition, the
background of the room is busy and competes with the subject. And there is
flash glare. We will be working on this photo a bit with the clone brush,
filter effects and cropping to make it much better. Let's start with clone
brushing the stuff on the ground to remove it. In the photo on the right, you
can see the result. We could even clone brush the dog out of the photo too!

The clone brush works by using one part of the photo to
cover unwanted areas - a sort of camouflage. Another analogy is to think of
the clone brush as a paint brush which you are using to paint over the area. Depending
on what you want to remove, it can take some time to do it well. I have some hints
below for the clone brush.
First, click on Correct and click on Clone Brush. Next,
using the slider, decide whether you want a circle or square clone brush. In
general using the circle gives a more natural and rounded effect while the
square is useful if you are cloning out objects with straight edges such as a
building or telephone pole. Decide whether you want to feather the edges. A
little bit of feathering is helpful to blend the edges. We will skip the
advance settings for now.
Chose the photo you want to work on. It is best to clone
before you do anything else to the photo such as crop or frame. In particular,
if you have rotated the photo and try to use the clone brush, you will find the
brush very slow. So it is better to clone with the photo in its original
orientation and before cropping and framing.
Using the mouse, the cursor now appears as a blue dotted
circle with a + in the center. Right click on the background the sofa near the
water bottle and a green circle will appear. This is your "brush"
and the part of the photograph within the circle is the "paint" you
will be using to paint over the waterbottle. The cursor will still have a blue
circle, so move the blue circle to the object you want to remove and push down
the left mouse button at the place you want to start and hold it down. Brush
the circle as you would a paint brush and the background will start to paint
over the person. Letting up on the left button will stop it so that you can
move the mouse to a different area.
One thing to keep in mind is that the green circle of
"paint" moves with the blue circle on the brush, so you need to keep
an eye on it. If the green paint circle overlaps the area that you just painted
away while you still have the left button depressed, then the green paint
circle will pick up "paint" from the original area that you brushed.
So the part of the person's head that you had brushed away may start to
reappear. This will not happen if you keep your paint brush strokes short and
do not overlap. Once the left button has been lifted this will not happen.
The program and brush will recognize the brushed area and not the original
photo.
Clicking the left mouse button will give you spots of the
background rather than a brush. You can change the "paint" on your
clone brush by right clicking on another area to gather "paint" and
the green circle will move to that area. Then you can start painting with the
new "paint".
Here are some hints that may help you and that I've garnered
by frequent use of the clone brush.
The bigger the circle or square, the faster the cloning goes
but you lose some subtlety and control. This is particularly true if the photo
has some shadows because the subtle changes in color and shadow will look out
of place. Use the square clone bush shape when brushing out objects with a
straight edge
Work in small areas by zooming way in on the object you want
to remove and remove small areas at a time.
Keep the green "paint" circle right next to the
area you are removing. This gives you the best match for variations in light
and shadow within the background and hence the most natural effect. You may
have to move the green circle frequently to do this.
The Undo button undoes anything you brushed from the when
you depressed the left button until you lifted it up. So to avoid frustration,
make your brushing strokes sessions short by lifting up on the left button
frequently as if you were using very short strokes with a paint brush.
To get the most natural edge effect, zoom way way in. Like
to the blurry pixelated stage. This means it will take some time to remove the
area but allows you to remove very small objects or to work with a very
complicated background.

Above you can see the clone brush in action. The green box
and half of the water bottle have been removed by painting the sofa over them
using the square brush. Next we will move the green "paint" square to the
carpet to remove the rest of the water bottle.
Color
Brush
The Color Brush tab is used to change both the color and the
opacity of a photo. With FxFoto Creative Edition, you can make all or part of
your photos slightly transparent or even completely clear. You can also tint
the photo any color you wish.
Changing the opacity allows you to overlap photos and have
some of the bottom photo show through the top photo. You can determine how
much you want to let show and vary it to get different effects. This allows
you to make montages like the one on the left below. And it lets you mute a
photo to produce an interesting foggy or dreamy effect such as the background
of the collage on the right.

You can
also use color to make some interesting effects like below:

In the photos above, you can see the effects of increasing
transparency. First, select your photo and click on Color Brush tab. Click on
Set Transparency for Whole Picture and the New Color bar will be gray. Move
the slider to the level of transparency that you want and then click anywhere
on the photo.
For color, you can either flood color around a point that
you click or you can change a clicked color everywhere on the photo. You can
see the difference in these choices by looking at the two pink photos. You can
also apply some transparency to mute the color and the last pink photo shows
that effect.
There are brushes here too. The color brushes can which you
can use to make an area of you photo colored or more transparent. You can
select the color by clicking on New Color and choosing one of the basic
colors. Or click on Custom Colors to get the full palette. You can even use
the Get Color tool on the Draw toolbar to use a color in the photo with the
color brush to make a perfect match. Decide on how wide you want your brush and
how much feathering you want along the edges. In the example below, the
scribble on the left is partially transparent, the one in the middle has no
transparency and the one on the end is fully transparent.

In digital scrapbooking, the fully transparent brush is used
a lot to make part of an element clear so that it looks more real. The best
example is a digital paperclip where parts of the inside clip need to be
invisible so that the clip really looks like it is attached to the paper. In
paper scraping this part of the metal clip would be behind the paper. But in
digital scraping, we just make that part of the clip transparent.
First, click on the paper clip to select it and then zoom
way in on it as shown below. Click on the Square color Brush and move the Transparency
slider all the way over to the right (255) and your brush will make whatever it
touches transparent. With this amount of zoom, we chose a Brush Width of 15.
Move your cursor to the section of paper clip that would be
behind the paper - that is the middle section. Hold down the left button and
move the brush along the area you want to make disappear. In the screenshot below,
you can see we have removed part of the clip. Just keep going until you have
erased the middle of the paperclip.

Filter
Effects
Filter effects are lots of fun and make your photos truly
unique. They range from filters like B&W and sepia to distortion filters
like swirl and fisheye. You can get a funky or as artsy as you wish with the click
of a mouse. And you can do the same photo any number of ways depending on your
tastes.
Since FxFoto Creative Edition has over 50 filter
effects, it would be hard to go through all of them here. Maybe the best way
to see some of the possibilities is to look at the photos below. Keep in mind
that this is only a few of the filter effects available in FxFoto Creative
Edition.
You will notice that several of the Filter Effects in the
list have the word (Rope) after them. These effects allow you to draw a line
either by hand or by using a preset shape and have the effect applied inside
the roped off space or sometimes outside it. On the right side of the Filter
Effects tab is the area where you can choose a rope. It can be a rectangle, oval
or a hand drawn loop. Or you can choose any of the patterns in the Cutters
library which includes over 100 shapes like butterfly, heart, horse or any
letter of the alphabet. In the example below, an oval was selected and the
filter effect is Wash Out (Rope). To have the wash out applied outside the
oval, check the Outside box. You can add some feathering of the edge to make
it blend in. Then click on Apply. If it is not enough Wash Out, click on Undo
and repeat but this time, check the More or Most box. If you want the Wash Out
applied inside the rope, then make sure the Outside box is unchecked.
Once the rope is drawn you may move it over your photo to
get the right position. Simply move your mouse over the rope until you get the
move sign (the + sign with arrows pointing in 4 directions), then drag it
wherever you want. You may stretch the rope by moving your mouse over the rope
edges until you get the double pointed arrow, then drag that edge wherever you
want.

Now we have
finished with the Correct tool! It has a lot of different tools for one
button, doesn't it? Let's take a look at cropping and text.
Cropping
Cropping is a very important facet of photo editing and
scrapbooking. It can remove distracting elements so the subject of the photo
is not lost. Cropping can also allow you to enlarge one area of the photo -
say a person's face - so that it is the sole focus of the photo. In film photography,
cropping was done by physically cutting the picture. And if you were planning
to focus on just one area then you had to order enlargements and crop them,
otherwise, the resulting photo was too small to see well. Cropping in a shape
meant a steady hand with a knife or scissors or perhaps the use of a die
cutting tool.
With FxFoto Creative Edition, you can crop before you print
your photos so the photos come to you ready to scrap. And you can order
several copies at once, without having to cut them all yourself!
Select the photo or paper you want to crop and click on the
Crop button. Take a look at the box - you can crop in a rectangle or oval by
clicking on the button. Then go to the selected image. Your cursor will now
look like a + sign in a dotted box. Left click on the upper right corner where
you want the crop to start and drag the mouse down to the right. A box or oval
appears as you drag your mouse with the left button down. Stop and release the
mouse where you want to stop. Did you get it just right? Great! Click on Crop
Image.
Not quite where you wanted or the edges aren't quite right?
You can move or adjust the crop. Move your cursor along the dotted crop edge.
You will see it change to a double pointed arrow or to the move symbol. Once
it does, left click and hold and use your mouse to move it.
Want to try a fun shape? Click on Pull or Adjust Pattern, then
click on the down arrow to produce a drop menu. Choose Cutters Library at the
top of the list for a large selection of shapes.
Here is a
partial list of the shapes you can use to crop photos or papers in FxFoto:
Rectangle
Square
Box with slight rounded corners
Box with some rounding
Box with more rounding
Box with most rounding
Sawtooth Box
Waves Box
Bumps Box
Torn Edge Box
Triangle
Diamond
Pentagram
Five Pointed Star
Six Pointed Star
Heart
|
Oval
Sawtooth
Bumps
Waves
Starburst
Spinning
Teardrops
Arrow
Bat
House
Christmas Tree
Car
Cat
Butterfly
Rooster
Tooth
|
Circle
Spikes
Dents
Petals
Big Waves
Spin Back
Angel
Baby Bottle
Horse
Eagle
Leaf
Castle
Dog
Pumpkin
Candy Cane
Canning Jar
|
And many
more shapes including the Alphabet.
Feathering: You can create a feathered edge when you crop. Find the
Feather at Outline Edges slider and use it to give a professional edge to your
photo. Be sure to set the feathering before you crop.

Above is the photo that we made by cloning brushing out the
stuff on the floor surrounding the girl. Using the Wash Out (Rope) filter, a rope was hand drawn around her
and the Wash Out filter was applied outside the
rope. You can see how it mutes the background so that she stands out better.
Now a rectangle crop has been drawn which will crop out some of the distracting
background of the room and the camera flash glare which is seen in the picture
on the wall behind her.
So let's take a look at where we started with the original
photo and the final one. The original photo was taken quickly on the way to
dress rehearsal and the water bottle, bag and green box were all for backstage
use but the busy mom-photographer didn't see them. The one on the right has
the stuff on the floor clone brushed out, the red eye removed, the background
muted by a Wash Out filter and the photo cropped to
show off the star subject.

Which photo would you rather use in your layout? The one on
the right, of course!
Text
Adding text to your photo or digital scrapbooking page
allows you add facts like a date and place as well as your personal
journaling. After all, scrapbooking is not just about photos, it is about
preserving our memories. So journaling is very important.
To add text, click on the Text button. In the dialog box,
you will notice that there are several choices. You may add text above your
photo as a title or below it as a caption or you can add text on top of the
photo. You can use any font you have installed in your computer and FxFoto
Creative Edition contains a lot of effects which you can apply to the text.
And for fun you can add dialog balloons too!
First, select the type of text you would like - title,
caption, dialog balloon or text box. The text box can either be free-form or a
box which is overlaid on the photo. Overlaying the text box means that when
you move the object or photo, the text will move too. This is really helpful
in digital scrapbooking where you would like to ‘glue' some text to a tag.
Click on the text type and the box below will open up.
Click on Text Font to choose the font you would like and to set the size.
Click on Text Color to change the font color. The familiar buttons of Word are
there too for setting text where you would like in the box and for bold,
italics and underline. Right next to the underline button, there are two
buttons:
and
. These
buttons are used to make the text box wider or narrower so you can get text all
in one line or so you can fit it in a particular space.


After you
have typed, grab the text box and drag it. You can place it anywhere! If you
want to change it, simply click on the text box to select it and then click on
Edit the Selected the Existing Text Object. You can then change the wording,
color or whatever. By grabbing on to the rotation corner of the box, you can
rotate the text!
Congratulations!
Now you can make your photos pop!!
So
what's next?
What else
can you do with FxFoto Creative Edition?
Digital
Scrapbooking for one! This is a hot new area and really growing. FxFoto Creative
Edition comes with nine digital kits and a huge assortment of digital
backgrounds so you can try it out. Many scrapbookers use a combination of
digital and paper scrapbooking. Often they add some embellishments to the photo,
print it as 8x8 and use that on a paper layout. That gives you the best of
both worlds!
Journaling
can easily be done in FxFoto Creative Edition and you can print it out and use
it on your layout. Add some digital embellishments too if you like! Our
website has some recipe pages that were done using FxFoto Creative Edition.
Many of the
filter effects can make your photos really special! Try framing them or
uploading to a site that does printing on mugs or other objects to make a
special present.
Saving
your Photos
In FxFoto you may save your photos
as either a collage or as a static image (jpg file) or both. What is the
difference? If you save it as a collage, then you can go back and edit it later
but you cannot edit a static (jpg) image. You may also save it as both by saving
the collage first and then the jpg file. For FxFoto, a collage can either be a
multi-photo scrapbook page or a slide show or a combination.
To
save as a collage, click on the Collage button on the top tool bar. Then click
on the fifth button down which reads Save Collage Document. Decide whether you
want to save it as a new collage or if you are replacing an old one and name
the folder where you would like it saved. Then click Next. Make sure the
Multi-photo Collage button is depressed and then click Next. On this dialog
box, there are a number of options which you may want to play with later but
for now just click Finish.
To
save as an image, click on the Collage button. Look down the menu for Save
Image File. In the dialog box, click on Entire Collage and then click Next.
Decide whether you are replacing an old image or adding a new one and also
select the folder. Then click Finish.
Printing
Your Photos
On your
printer:
Click on one or more left-pane photos to open them. Press
the Print button and a thumbnail of the collage page will appear. Select your
photos by clicking to add a green tag and press Next. Choose various Printer
Settings, such as title and caption text to print at the top and bottom of each
page, and press Next again. Press Finish and the final printer control dialog appears.
On a Web
Print Site:
The Upload command in FxFoto makes it easy to send photos to
online printing and sharing sites. Click on one or more left-pane photos to
open them. Press the Upload button and thumbnails of all open photos appear.
Select one or more to be uploaded by clicking to toggle on their green tags and
press Next. Choose the upload service from the available list. FxFoto can
automatically send files over the Internet to the listed services.
The Generic choice places your selected photos in a special
folder to make it easier to manually upload them to other services. This folder
is called FxFotoUpload and is located in My Documents. After pressing Next
again, choose the style of the images to be uploaded and see them previewed.
Also choose whether to Deresolve for faster uploading (but too much deresolution
can make prints fuzzy). Press either Next or Finish and follow the
instructions for the selected service. For most services a web browser window
appears after selected photos have finished uploading so that you can organize
them online or order prints.
When you print your photos which have text, you need to make
sure that the text is not right up against the edge of the photo. If it is,
then you may find it is cut off when they are printed. Here is what Mpix (www.mpix.com)
says about this problem, "Digital printers have what is called oversizing. Oversizing
is a process in which the image being developed onto the photo paper is
magnified by a certain percentage in order to counteract paper shift within the
printer. Photographic paper is loaded into the printer in rolls. As the paper
travels from the roll through the machine it can drift up to 1/8 inch by the
time it reaches the lasers that expose the paper with the image. No amount of
calibration on the paper path can prevent this drift." They therefore recommend
leaving a margin of about ¼ inch on your edges. The bigger the print size, the
more margin you need.
Emailing
Click on your photo to open them. Press the EMail button and
thumbnails of all open photos appear. Select one or more to be e-mailed by
clicking to turn on their green tags and press Next. Choose the style of the
images to be e-mailed and see them previewed. Also choose whether to send
Small or Large images. Smaller images have less detail but are faster to
send. Press OK and your default e-mail client is called with the chosen photo
images already attached to a new message. Just address and add any message
text before sending.