Laura wondered, since the program had let her easily select the members of the family for the "enhance" action, if it would let her select smaller portions of the photo. She could think of a few minor things she wanted to alter.
She cleared the previous selection and found the zoom tool, zooming in on her hands. She switched back to the select tool and clicked on the tips of the fingers on one hand. She was delighted to see a pop-up window indicate "fingernails," and that the other hand was automatically selected.
The whole-body enhancement had given her neatly trimmed fingernails that appeared to be expertly painted with clear polish, but she wanted to see if her nails could be made longer. A quick scan of the available options, a click of the "enhance" button, and her nails grew out about a half inch, the tips white as if they'd been professionally manicured.
The piece-of-cake enhancement gave her the confidence to try something else. She zoomed out and then back in on her face, clicking on the temple and getting a pop-up window labeled "brain."
She was already reasonably intelligent -- she looked to the wall where her college diploma hung next to her husband's -- and she didn't want to turn herself into some kind of Stephen Hawking super-genius, just give herself a little intelligence boost, primarily to help her at work, so she could think more clearly, think faster, something like that.
She examined the options the software was giving her.