several ways, here are two 1) have each photo on its on layer - use a selection tool to select what you want to move on the forst photo - then copy - select the layer of the second and paste and your part will appear in a new layer above it - then move it were you want it and merge the two layers 2) use the clone tool - select the middle of the part you want to move of the first photo - select the second photo layer and "paint" the part on
Low cost - Photoshop Elements, expensive software- Photoshop for sure.
A photo editing software. It is consumer version of Adobe Photoshop and have most of Photoshop features. Elements costs 1/6 of Photoshop price.
Yes it is, and by the way best home or enthusiast image editing software although one can use it and for professional work. Photoshop Elements is Photoshop but with less features dedicated to professional work.
One of the most popular consumer photo editing packages is Adobe Photoshop Elements, which can be purchased at http://www.adobe.com/products/photoshopel/ . There are also some free solutions: one is called GIMP at gimp.org, which attempts to be a free general purpose program similar to Photoshop, and another is Google's Picasa which is specialized for photo editing at picasa.google.com .
The erase tool in Photoshop will allow a person to remove parts of a photo. Also using the select tool and then clicking Delete will remove part of the photo.
For beginners and amateurs best choice is Adobe Photoshop Elements See related link
You can try http://www.pixlr.com/editor/
Technically Adobe Photoshop is not a photo processor. Adobe Photoshop is just a place where you can edit your photos and other imagery. It has nothing to do with photo processing.
several ways, here are two 1) have each photo on its on layer - use a selection tool to select what you want to move on the forst photo - then copy - select the layer of the second and paste and your part will appear in a new layer above it - then move it were you want it and merge the two layers 2) use the clone tool - select the middle of the part you want to move of the first photo - select the second photo layer and "paint" the part on
First you have to render the image of yourself from the background, usually using the pen tool. Then you save the image as a PNG file so the transparency remains. Then you add the rendered image into the other photo and there you have it
Although ACDSee Photo Software and Photoshop have many similar qualities, many would agree Photoshop is the better choice for general photo editing. ACDSee Photo Software is more specific for digital scrapbook editing.
No, Photoshop is a powerful, advanced photo editing utility