I see you are getting to grips with this photo editing Kiya, you have really made some novel changes to your cloud pictures to make them more interesting and I agree about the third one being the best.
Brian, like your Butterfly close up, did you know that it is called a ‘Gate Keeper’ or ‘Hedge Brown’
Kiya you also wrote:
but pure luck was on my side when I went back to Elements 7 & opened the .dng it then opened in another program I have PS CS3 Extended
I thought that you may like to know that it was not luck that opened the PS CS3 program, it was the file extension that was on your photograph that did it.
All of the 3 digit extensions that appear after a photo or any file that you save on your PC (this has recently increased to 4, but we will skip that for now) will tell it which program it should open in order to read that particular type of file. So for example if you had a document sent to you it would probably have the extension .Doc, if you tried to open this document the .Doc extension would tell your PC to open Microsoft Word or another word processing program in order to read it.
The same applies to photographs, all picture files have an extension that tells the PC that it is a Photograph and not something else like a letter or an engineering drawing.
Your PC uses something called ‘file associations’ now all that this means is that it associates a particular program with that particular file type. So for example, you may be sent a pattern for a cross stitch sewing picture that can be printed out, so it may be sent as a .PCX file. If you click on the received file, your PC will recognise the .PCX file extension and attempt to open a suitable program on your PC, in this case a graphics program such as ‘Paintbrush’
Nowadays lots of programs are capable of opening all sorts of files so it is unlikely that you will encounter a file that cannot be read by some program or even several programs on your PC. On occasion you may receive a file that gives the error message “File type unknown” this is just the PC’s way of telling you that it does not have a program that can read that particular file type.
So in your case Kiya, the PS CS3 program is the one that is associated with the .dng file type and should always open if you click on that type of file.
"Here endeth the third lecture"
