Starting to work in Adobe Photoshop

Posted on 20. Jul, 2009 by admin in Basic

The Adobe Photoshop work area includes menus, toolbars, and panels that give you quick access to a variety of tools and options for editing and adding elements to your image. You can also add commands and filters to the menus by installing third-party software known as plug-in modules.

Photoshop works with bitmapped, digitized images (that is, continuous-tone images that have been converted into a series of small squares, or picture elements, called pixels). You can also work with vector graphics, which are drawings made of smooth lines that retain their crispness when scaled. You can create original artwork in Photoshop, or you can import images into the program from many sources, such as:

  • Photographs from a digital camera.
  • Commercial CDs of digital images.
  • Scans of photographs, transparencies, negatives, graphics, or other documents.
  • Captured video images.
  • Artwork created in drawing programs.

Starting Photoshop and opening a file

To begin, you’ll start Adobe Photoshop and reset the default preferences.

1 On the desktop, double-click the Adobe Photoshop icon to start Adobe Photoshop and then immediately hold down Ctrl+Alt+Shift (Windows) or Command+Option+Shift (Mac OS) to reset the default settings.

If you don’t see the Photoshop icon on your desktop, choose Start > All Programs > Adobe Photoshop CS4 (Windows) or look in either the Applications folder or the Dock (Mac OS).

2 When prompted, click Yes to confirm that you want to delete the Adobe Photoshop Settings file.

The Photoshop work area appears as shown in the following illustration.

defultpsdesktop

The default workspace in Photoshop consists of the application bar, menu bar, and options bar at the top of the screen, the Tools panel on the left, and several open panels in the panel dock on the right. When you have documents open, one or more image windows also appear, and you can display them at the same time using the new tabbed interface.

The Photoshop user interface is very similar to the one in Adobe Illustrator®, Adobe InDesign®, and Adobe Flash®—so learning how to use the tools and panels in one application means that you’ll know how to use them in the others. There are a few differences between the Photoshop work area on Windows and that on Mac OS.

On Windows, the menu bar is combined with the application bar, if your screen resolution makes it possible to fit them on the same line.

  • On Mac OS, you can now work with an application frame, which contains the Photoshop application’s windows and panels within a frame that is distinct from other applications you may have open; only the menu bar is outside the application frame. The application frame is disabled by default; to enable the application frame, choose Window > Application Frame. To use the new tabbed interface, you must have the application frame enabled. Additionally, you can enable and disable the application bar. This book assumes you are using the application bar.

apllicationframe

3 Choose File > Open, and navigate to the lesson files

4 Select the 01A_End.psd file and click Open. Click OK if you see the Embedded Profile Mismatch dialog box. The 01A_End.psd file opens in its own window, called the image window. The end files in this book show you what you are creating in the different projects. In this file, an image of a vintage car has been enhanced without overexposing the headlight.

5 Choose File > Close, or click the close button on the title bar of the image window. (Do not close Photoshop.)

Related posts:

  1. Opening a file with Adobe Bridge
  2. Using the Differant Photoshop Tools
  3. Undoing mistakes in Photoshop
  4. Using keyboard combinations with tool actions in photoshop
  5. Creating an Animated Brush in Photoshop

4 Comments

Swapna

24. Jul, 2009

Very good tutorial , basic means starts with basic

Maloix

24. Jul, 2009

Great work I think it’s a big effort make this kind of tutorials, few people make this kind of tutorials. Greetings, go ahead! I’ve mentioned in my blog.

admin

24. Jul, 2009

Hi Maloix,

Thanks alot for your comment. I was not sure if this kind of “basic tutorials” would be well received and thus hesitant to write them. But with this kind of comment, i plan to make this website teach all photoshop newbs how to use photoshop the right way…. from the beginning.

Cheers

rasheem

01. Aug, 2009

this tutorial is very handy indeed for those who are not familiar with Photoshop. i learned a great deal with this tutorial and please have more of these

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