Beautify Your Photos With Blur
Razor-sharp focus is not always the right prescription for a perfect photo. Adding subtle blur effects can impart a surreal or a romantic tone to your image. Check out any original Star Trek episode to see what soft focus can do for a scene.
One way that photographers used to get a soft-focus effect was by applying gel to their camera's lens. Another method was to use a special soft-focus lens, which has a single optical element that was physically unable to produce a sharply focused image. You get sharper--or softer--images based on the aperture setting that you shoot with.
These days, of course, blur and soft-focus effects are just a few clicks away in any photo editing program. I'll show you a trick in Adobe Photoshop Elements, but you can translate it to your favorite photo editing program.
Blur the Background With Photoshop Elements

I'll use the same sort of technique that I described last week in the lesson on sharpening. Start by choosing Layer, Duplicate Layer, and then click OK. Make sure you have selected the top layer (click the top layer in the Layer Palette on the right side of the screen) and then add some blur.

If you don't like the effect, undo the step and try again.

Fancy Blur With a Plug-In
Of course, there are a million variations of this effect, and you can make it as subtle or as dramatic as you like. If you find this sort of thing to be as much fun as I do, you might also want to look into plug-ins that make advanced effects easier. Try onOne Software's FocalPoint, for example. It's a bit pricey ($159), but it gives amazing results. You can try it for 30 days for free.

Hot Pic of the Week
Get published, get famous! Each week, we select our favorite reader-submitted photo based on creativity, originality, and technique. Every month, the best of the weekly winners gets a prize valued at between $15 and $50.
Here's how to enter: Send us your photograph in JPEG format, at a resolution no higher than 640 by 480 pixels. Entries at higher resolutions will be immediately disqualified. If necessary, use an image editing program to reduce the file size of your image before e-mailing it to us. Include the title of your photo along with a short description and how you photographed it. Don't forget to send your name, e-mail address, and postal address. Before entering, please read the full description of the contest rules and regulations.

Derek writes: "The man in this photo is an Australian aborigine I met at a local art fair. He had a small teepee set up and was selling his paintings and CDs." Derek fiddled with the colors on his PC to extract what he thought was the essence of the portrait.

Tyler says that he took this photo with a Nikon D50 at Planting Field Arboretum in Oyster Bay, New York.
See all the Hot Pic of the Week photos online.
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