Graphics Programs Reference
In-Depth Information
Step Five:
Scroll through your images and any time
you see a Danica Patrick photo, just click
once on it and it “paints” those keywords
onto your photo (you can add as many
as you want—just remember to put a
comma between them). As you click the
Painter tool, a white highlight border will
appear around the tagged photo, and a
dark rectangular box appears with the
keywords you've just assigned (as seen
here). If you see multiple photos in a row
you want to tag, just press-and-hold your
mouse button and paint right across
them, and they'll all be tagged. When
you're done with the Painter tool, just
click back where you found it in the tool-
bar. The Painter tool is what I use when
I have a lot of photos in a shoot, but just
need to tag some individual photos with
a particular keyword.
TIP: Create Keyword Sets
If you use the same keywords often, you
can save them as a Keyword Set, so they're
just one click away. To create a set, just
type the keywords in the Keyword Tags
text field, then click on the Keyword Set
pop-up menu at the bottom of the panel.
Choose Save Current Settings as New
Preset and they're added to the list, along
with built-in sets like Wedding, Portrait, etc.
Step Six:
The next panel down, Keyword List, lists
all the keywords you've created or that
were already embedded into the photos
you've imported. The number to the right
of each keyword tells you how many
photos are tagged with that keyword.
If you hover your cursor over a keyword
in the list, a white arrow appears on the
far right. Click on it and it displays just
the photos with that keyword (in the
example shown here, I clicked on the
arrow for Danica Patrick, and it brought
up the only three photos in my entire
catalog tagged with that keyword). This
is why specific keywords are so powerful.
 
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