Assuming PSE has the same keyboard shortcuts, with PSE fully maximized so it takes up all of your monitor, hit 'z' to select the zoom tool, then right click on your photo and select '100%'. That will zoom into your photo to 100%. Then hit the tab key. That (at least in Photoshop) will make all of the PSE interface disappear so that only the photo is visible, so it should be the same size as viewing in a slide show. You may have to hit the tab key a couple of times as it progressively hides different Photoshop interface elements until there are none. Hit tab again to get them back.Wandering Daisy wrote: ↑Wed Nov 11, 2020 12:41 pm But the Photoshop Elements 10 display is not very good (small window). I can zoom in and out but that is quite tedious when processing. I usually do quite a bit of color adjustments when processing. I think the problem may be that I do not have my white-balance on the camera set correctly. I will have to play with that. And thanks for your assessment that my camera is OK, although I have to admit that my husband's I-Phone 12 takes better photos some times.
If you shoot in RAW it doesn't matter what your white balance is set to in the camera as you can just drag the slider in PSE to taste. If you are shooting in jpeg it 100% matters.
Your camera is totally fine, I've seen very good landscape images from that line of camera.
I used to print my own images but dealing with clogged inkheads became to much of a bother. Now I send out all of my photos.
When you take a photo with a cellphone (or if you shoot in jpeg), the 'RAW' image is automatically converted to a jpeg in the background without you even knowing it. However, you are then at the mercy of whatever team of engineers put together that conversion algorithm. With a RAW image, you have to take the place of the team of engineers. The upside is that you get to develop the image to your taste. The downside is the RAW image will look very flat until you process it. It will almost never look as good as the jpeg would have until you process it. So it is not surprising that your husbands iPhone images look better than your RAW images. But once you get your processing skills a little polished your finished images will look much better than the output of a phone/camera jpeg.Wandering Daisy wrote: ↑Wed Nov 11, 2020 12:41 pm And thanks for your assessment that my camera is OK, although I have to admit that my husband's I-Phone 12 takes better photos some times.