Visual evidence is crucial
In your Art-Making Inquiries Portfolio, your visuals should do most of the talking. That means your images—like sketches, experiments, and artworks—should take up the most space. You’ll still include some written evidence, but it should be short and used mainly to show critical reflection (what you learned, changed, or noticed).
In your Artist Project and Connections Study, you’ll need a balance between visuals and writing. But even then, visuals should still be strong. There are word limits to help keep the focus on images.
Your visuals are the main evidence that show how you’ve explored, experimented, investigated, and refined your ideas. Writing is just there to support and explain what we can already see in your art. So focus on showing, not telling, your artistic thinking.
The quality of your images WILL play a role in your scoring. This is the only documentation that readers have to look at for your work. Be sure you understand how to maximize your score when it comes to documenting process and finished images.
Check out this link for support in getting started with Photoshop - How to Edit Images in Photoshop - Quick Tips