Keep each photo on a separate layer and use layer masks to hide the parts that you want removed.
There is no simple one button solution to the problem of matching multiple photos together.
To control overlapping, you can temporarily switch to 50 % opacity or Difference fill mode. Some hard imperfect edges you might later touch-up with the clone stamp; use the option "All Layers" and put the cloning work and completely new empty layer above the others.
Much better, though, to have the PhotoMerge function of Photoshop CS or Photoshop Elements 3 (not 2).
Or try downloading autostitch it works and I’ve joined up to 100 photos together with it very successfully – it’s free.
John
The latest version of Photoshop has a plug-in called Photomerge for exactly this kind of project. Download the free trial to give it a test drive.
Be prepared not to want to go back to PS7 after the thirty days though! <g>
Chris
Chris..
Thank you…version CS2 was perfect…you are right…what a stellar version…think I’m going to have to upgrade…
Thanks Again..
Bob
The picture came out GREAT!!!!!
I have a document, with 110 pages, that I have scanned in the PDF format. I want to have all pages in one file so that I can email it and the recipent can open it in Adobe Reader. I have Photoshop 5 and Windows 98. Is this something I can do or do I need an upgrade or download. If I can do it, please let me know how. I checked into the Adobe Reader conversion option but that is to do one file (or in my case one page) at a time so that won’t work and that is for converting to a PDF file and my files are already PDF. Any suggestions will be appreciated.
Karen S.
Karen, it helps to start a new topic…
In answert to your question, I know it is possible to add pages from one PDF to another PDF using Acrobat (the full version, not just the Reader), there are probably better ways but I don’t know them , maybe someone here can help, or you can try the Acrobat forum.