Bit Digital

If I have a digital picture where I have a slight bit amount of mustard, is there a way to edit?
I have a digital picture that where I have a very faint amount of mustard on my cheek and a very tiny amount of nose hair in one nostril (mostly only noticeable if you zoom in to these). It was taken with a Canon Powershot A720 IS and has some type of CD software that came with it. I'm trying to find out if the software lets you edit pictures in that way, which I wouldn't know how to anyway. Does anyone have any advice?
You need an image editor with clone and/or healing tools.
Photoshop, Elements, Paint Shop Pro, the Gimp (that one is a free download), etc will do it.
Free online sites can do it, too, eg. www.fotoflexer.com.
Or you can just upload the full sized original to somewhere like Flickr, and I'll do it for you.
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Mark Thomas talks about the Digital economy Bill
Pixel Color Depth Or Bits Per Pixel in Digital Photos
Digital photos are built of many pixels. Each pixel has a unique value which represents its color. When you are looking at a digital photo your eyes and brain merge these pixels into one continuous digital photo. Each pixel has a color value that is one out of a finite number of possible colors this number is known as color depth.
Each pixel has a color value that is one out of a palette of unique colors. The number of such unique potential colors is known as color depth. Color depth is also known as bit depth or bits per pixel since a certain number of bits are used to represent a color and there is a direct correlation between the number of such bits and the number of possible unique colors. For example if a pixel color is represented by one bit - one bit per pixel or a bit depth of 1 - the pixel can have only two unique values or two unique colors usually these colors will be black or white.
Color depth is important in two domains: the graphical input or source and the output device on which this source is displayed. Each digital photo source or other graphics sources are displayed on output devices such as computer screens and printed paper. Each source has a color depth. For example a digital photo can have a color depth of 16 bits. The source color depth depends on how it was created for example the color depth of the camera sensor used to shoot a digital photo. This color depth is independent of the output device used to display the digital photo. Each output device has a maximum color depth that it supports and can also be set to lower color depth (usually to save resources such as memory). If an output device has a higher color depth than the source the output device will not be fully utilized. If an output device has a lower color depth than the source the output device will display a lower quality version of the source.
Many times you will hear color depth expressed as a number of bits (bit depth or bits per pixel). Here is a table of common bits per pixel values and the number of colors they represent:
About the Author
Information about photography and photo prints is on printrates.com - your home for cameras and printing This article can be reprinted only if the resource box including the backlink is included. Ziv Haparnas writes about practical technology issues.








Wooahh I had to concentrate to hear what you were saying.