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3. Exploring Carousel - Pg. 21

3. Exploring Carousel Getting photos into Carousel is easy enough, and I think you'll find that working inside of Carousel is just as straightforward. You start off with a single carousel when you install the app, and a single carousel (see sidebar) may be enough for many people. Regardless of whether you have a single carousel or several, they all look and function the same way. Carousel or carousel? Carousel is the name of the application, but it is also the name of what you can use to create separate collections of your photos. You might think of each carousel within the application as its own photo album or library, and you are allowed to create up to five different carousels. We'll look at all the aspects of creating and sharing carousels in the next chapter, but I just wanted to clarify how the word Carousel with a capital C means the application itself and carousel with a lowercase c means the individual collections or albums within the app. The Carousel Interface Adobe did a good job of keeping the Mac version of Carousel (Figure 3.1) almost identical in terms of looks and functionality as the mobile version (Figure 3.2). There are some minor differences that we'll explore, but for the most part when you look at your photos in Carousel on any device, your photos will look the same and you'll have all the same options available to you. Figure 3.1 The Carousel interface on a Mac.