Graphics Programs Reference
In-Depth Information
Step Three:
If you actually want to jump back to
what your photo looked like at a particu-
lar stage, then instead of hovering over
the state, you'd click once on it and your
photo reverts to that state. By the way, if
you use the keyboard shortcut for your
undos (instead of using the History panel),
the edit you're undoing is displayed in very
large letters over your photo (as seen here).
This is handy because you can see what
you're undoing, without having to keep
the History panel open all the time.
Step Four:
During your editing process, if you
come to a point where you really like
what you see and you want the option
of quickly jumping back to that point, go
to the Snapshots panel (it's right above
the History panel), and click on the +
(plus sign) button on the right side of
the panel header (as shown here). That
moment in time is saved to the Snap-
shots panel, and it appears with its name
field highlighted, so you can give it a name
that makes sense to you (I named mine
“Black & White with Exposure Adjusted,”
so I'd know that if I clicked on that snap-
shot, that's what I'd get—a black-and-white
photo with the exposure tweaked. You
can see my snapshot highlighted in the
Snapshots panel shown here). By the way,
you don't have to actually click on a previ-
ous step to save it as a snapshot. Instead, in
the History panel you can just Right-click
on any step and choose Create Snapshot
from the pop-up menu. Pretty handy.
 
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