 The last thing I wanted to cover is how to save an image because this is something I run into a lot when I've got to create something for somebody else. Now I'm going to – so I've got the B photo open again. And I have a couple of options when it comes to saving this image. If I'm going to save it for print, or I need to keep it in a high resolution for any reason, I would choose under File menu. I can save a copy, save as, just like any other application like Word or Excel, anything where you've got a file menu. I have a lot of file type options down here. JPEG, which you might be familiar with from using the web, we've also got GIF on there or GIF. I'm not going to get into that debate today, but of course that's also on there. PNG, these tend to be your more web friendly formats. A lot of other options on here too that will preserve a lot of detail if you have a very high resolution image. TIFF tends to be a go-to if it's going to be something that you need to print. You have a top notch camera. You don't want to lose any quality. You want to make these really significant changes and save it without losing anything. TIFF is usually a good way to go for that if you're going to end up sending it to a printer. So that's one way. And I'm going to cancel out of this to go show you the other way. The other way, which I tend to use more often than just a file save as, and I'll show you why. Under File, now in my version, this is the different version one. In the version that I'm using, I'm in Creative Cloud, the latest one, the Save for Web has been moved to a sub menu. So I'm going to show you where it is for me. If you have a version previous to I believe 2014 Creative Cloud, if you're operating on any of the Creative Suite versions, it will just be right under Save As. I believe it's Save for Web and Devices is what it's called. Or Save for Web is definitely a part of it. So for me though, it's under Export, Save for Web Legacy. So it's been kind of relegated off to the side. I'm not sure why, but I'm glad it's still there because I use it a lot. So if I'm going to save this for use online, if I'm going to post it to Facebook or Twitter or put it on our website, then this is where I would go. So once I've clicked that, I've got a few options here. I can choose on the upper right, we've got Presets. Some of the file formats that I mentioned before are present here. So there's GIF, there's JPEG, and there's PNG. So depending on what the subject is, we'll determine what it is I should be using. I would say just a good rule of thumb if it's anything that's been illustrated, GIF and PNG are good ways to go. If it's a photograph, if it's something that's real, then JPEG is definitely the one. And in earlier days of smaller bandwidth, you would have had to make choices between the quality, so high, low, medium, things like that, for example, for the JPEG. But if I choose JPEG on high, you can see the quality here is 60. I can bump that up if I need to. It will make the file size a little larger, but it will also retain a little more detail to the image. And if I haven't specified an image size already with the steps that I showed earlier under the image menu, I can still do that here. I can specify a smaller image size if I have a very specific size in mind. If I just need it 320 wide, you can see that the number below it changed to 219, and the preview also adjusted to meet that size. So this will save it for use on the web in a resolution that's right for any screen. If I just click Save, I can choose where to save it, and of course it will save it as a JPEG, which is what I've specified.