Good luck. I'm sorry you found me so badly wanting in my responses to the OP. At first, I had no idea what level of use, or even what version of Photoshop, she was using, which is quite typical for most requests for help.
That has nothing to do with "expertise," either, btw. Any one of us at some point might post without thinking about providing a lot of information, and this forum doesn't appear to have any place for us to put our technical information into a signature line. There was only her initial post up when I began responding to it using all that highly technical jargon. Other messages can be posted while I'm still writing and I'll have no idea anything else is being posted. Had I responded at a much more basic level than I did, I'd have been excoriated for "talking down" to the user who would no doubt turn out to be someone with at least 10 years experience.
And yes, over the years I've offended countless advanced users I don't know for not grasping from their message the extent of their expertise. I'll store your away and quite possibly find a way to keep it in mind when making an initial response with little to go on. Mind, I'll still have to consider not offending more advanced users along with people who barely know anything about their computer.
Was that not helpful? Oh, dear. I seem to put my foot in my mouth often these days. I intended my comments to be just comments, not criticisms. Given the complexity, your reply was about the only reply you could have made and my comment was intended to be sympathetic, not critical. In response to your "what I should have said": you did say what you should have said given the context available to you at the time. I think these forums can be very useful, and it is very useful for beginners like me to know that others are having problems and that there are solutions, some of which are appropriate for us now, and some of which will become more useful when we become more experienced.
I tend to be sympathetic towards Adobe, not hostile, and I seem to be digging a hole for myself, so I'll stop before I dig it any deeper. Please forgive any upset I've caused. Don't worry about it. Pet Peeves shortly followed by my name made me wonder, sincerely, how I could have treated the OP differently. I've been using PS for 20 years, but I'm always a beginner, always learning something, always having to say Huh?
What's that when it's at home? So I never mean to make people uncomfortable because they don't know something. We all don't know something, and it never gets any less frustrating when it's something we need to know to solve a problem.
And online — well, as great as it is we all get to talk to each other, it's easily a breeding ground for misunderstanding.
So I think it's usually better to ask and try to talk it out than ignore it—so I did. I've been around long enough to know that most of the Adobe staff I encounter really do try hard and want to provide us with the best they can given the resources to do so. I still can get upset about a change—it's my workflow, after all. What was the first Photoshop version? How can I install Adobe Photoshop for free? How do I get Adobe Photoshop for free on Windows 10?
How do I activate Photoshop ? How many GB is Adobe Photoshop? Is Photoshop crack safe? How do I activate Photoshop CC? How do I activate Adobe Pro? How do I transfer my adobe license to a new computer? Keyboard shortcuts can make the difference between working fast and working at warp speed.
They can drastically reduce the amount of time you spend taking your hands off the keyboard to use your mouse to do things like choose menu items or grab tools. You can reassign shortcuts, add new ones, and show or hide menu options. Choose which type of shortcuts you want to add or change from the Shortcuts For pop-up menu. In the list below the Shortcuts For menu, select the shortcut you want to change. To save your new shortcut set, click the floppy-disk icon near the top of the dialog box to the right of the Set pop-up menu.
In the resulting dialog box, give your custom set of shortcuts a name and then click Save. To help you remember the new shortcuts, Photoshop lets you print a handy chart to tack up on the wall.
In the resulting Save dialog box, give the keyboard shortcut list a name, choose where to save it, and click Save. Click the little flippy triangle next to each menu to see the items it includes. To hide a menu item, select it and then click its visibility eye; to show a hidden item, click within its Visibility column. To do that, select the item you want to highlight, click the Color column, and then choose a color from the resulting pop-up menu. Click OK and enjoy your new customizations.
These preferences let you choose the colors for your guides Guides, Grids, and Rulers , gridlines Smart Guides , and slice lines Slicing an Existing Image. You can make Photoshop do even more cool stuff by installing third-party programs called plug-ins. There are so many useful plug-ins that this book has an entire chapter devoted to them Chapter The preferences in this category let you store plug-ins somewhere other than the Photoshop folder, which can help you avoid losing your plug-ins if you have to reinstall Photoshop.
Leave both checkboxes in the Extension Panels section turned on so Photoshop can connect to the Internet if a plug-in or panel needs to grab information from a website.
For example, the Kuler panel Using the Kuler Panel lets you use color themes posted on the Web by folks in the Kuler community. Once you get comfortable in Photoshop, you can customize most every tool in the Tools panel: the Crop tool, selection tools, healing brushes, the Type tool, gradients, and so on. The Preset Manager handles loading, saving, and storing your personalized goodies, as well as all the presets built-ins which you can think of as tool recipes, such as gradients, patterns, and so on that came with the program.
Each group of settings, like a category of brushes, is called a preset library. To see a certain preset library, choose it from the Preset Type pop-up menu at the top of the Preset Manager dialog box Figure Flip ahead to Meet the Mixer Brush to see it in action! You can share them with other computers which is handy when the whole team needs to use the same color swatches or brushes and upload them to the Web for the whole world to download.
To create a preset library of your own, open the Preset Manager and click the Save Set button. In the resulting Save dialog box, give your custom library a name. Photoshop automatically saves it in the folders where it stores all custom settings unless you pick a different location on your hard drive which is handy if you plan on sharing the library with other folks. When everything looks good, click Save.
For example, if you plan on emailing your preset library, your desktop may be a good option. Navigate to where the library lives and click Load. To add to the fun, you can also rename preset libraries. In the Preset Manager dialog box, select the relevant library from the Preset Type pop-up menu and click Rename; type a new name in the Name field and click OK. Photoshop asks if you want to replace the current brushes or append add to them instead.
Skip to main content. Start your free trial. Chapter 1. Photoshop CS5 Guided Tour. Meet the Application Frame. Figure Photoshop stores the vast majority of its tools in the panels on the left and right sides of the Application Frame; a full introduction to panels starts on page Resizing the frame also automatically changes the size of your panels and windows to fit within it. Tip If you need to do some work on your desktop or in another program, you can temporarily hide Photoshop.
The Application Bar. The Almighty Options Bar. Bottom: To redock the Options bar, drag it to the top of your screen. Once you see a thin blue line—like the one shown here—release your mouse button. Swapping Screen Modes. You can edit images in any of these modes. Also, pressing the Tab key lets you hide or show menus and panels. Flip ahead to page 51 to learn how to open an image.
Tip You can free up precious screen real estate by pressing the Tab key to hide menus and panels. Customizing Your Workspace. Most of the preset workspaces are designed to help you perform specialized tasks. It highlights all the menu items that are new in CS5, which is a great way to see additions at a glance. Note New in Photoshop CS5 is the ability to delete any workspace you want—including the presets! Working with Panels. Here you can see the difference between expanded left and collapsed right panels.
Double-click the medium gray bar at the top of a panel to collapse it vertically circled on the left , rolling it up like a window shade; double-click the bar again to expand it. Install CS5 on Mac Download and installation help links Adobe. Help download and installation to Prodesigntools links can be found on the most linked pages. They are essential; especially steps 1, 2 and 3. If you click on a link that does not have these listed steps, open a second window by using the link to Lightroom 3 to see these "important Instructions".
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