Slideshows

Elements makes it easy to create very slick little slideshows—some even with music and fancy transitions between the images—that you can play on your PC or send to your friends. By using the Slide Show feature, you can make extremely elaborate slideshows. If you prefer the simple life, you can quickly create a plain vanilla PDF slideshow in about as much time as it takes to email a photo.

The simple PDF slideshow is really straightforward to create, and looks quite impressive, but you can't add audio to it or control how your slides transition. On the plus side, you can send a PDF slideshow to anyone, regardless of what operating system that person uses. As long as your recipients have Adobe Reader or another PDF-viewing program, they can watch your show.

The Slide Show Editor, on the other hand, lets you indulge your creativity to your heart's content. You can add all sorts of snazzy transitions, mix in sound in the form of background music or narration, add clip art, pan around your slides, and more. It's a bit more complex to work with the Slide Show Editor than to make a PDF, but the real drawback to the Slide Show Editor comes in your choices for the final output. The slideshow you create with it isn't as universally compatible as the PDF slideshow, as explained later in this chapter.

Tip

If you plan to create a simple PDF slideshow, you need to do all your photo editing before-hand, since the Simple Show just sends your photos as is. The Slide Show Editor, on the other ...

Get Photoshop Elements 6: The Missing Manual now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.