Display subsets of layers based on name, kind, effect, mode, attribute, or color label. You can use the Properties panel to quickly modify the layer components selected in the Layers panel.
For more information, see Migrate presets from earlier versions of Photoshop. Background saving lets you keep working after you choose Save commands, instead of waiting for saving to complete. Note : If you regularly save large files and want the most consistent performance from Photoshop, disable Save In Background in the File Handling preferences.
Auto-recover stores crash-recovery information at specified intervals. The default is ten minutes. In case the application crashes, your work is recovered the next time you start the application.
For more information, see Paragraph styles and Character styles. A new Type menu has been added, and most of the text and type related functionality is available from the Type menu. Design, edit, and elegantly present your work using six Adobe Touch apps designed for your tablet, including Photoshop Touch, Adobe Kuler, and Adobe Debut.
Transfer files through Adobe Creative Cloud for further refinement in Photoshop CS6—or to view, access, and share from almost anywhere. Or, interact directly with Photoshop CS6 wirelessly with Photoshop companion apps from Adobe and the developer community. Simplified Basic controls in the Develop tab improve highlight and shadow rendering. The new Basic sliders and new local adjustments options appear when you process new images or convert previously processed images to Process Version PV To convert an image, click the exclamation-point icon in the lower-right corner of the image preview area.
For a video overview, see this tutorial from Iceflow Studios. Legal Notices Online Privacy Policy. Buy now. What's new in CS6 Search.
Adobe Creative Cloud only. Liquify filter enhancements. Apply Blur gallery effects as smart filters. Copy CSS properties from shape or text layers. Conditional actions. High dpi display support. Changes in view options. Crop tool changes and enhancements.
Updates to the Crop tool include numerous bug fixes and enhancements, including: Front Image and new presets in the Aspect Ratio menu. Clicking the double-arrow icon changes the crop orientation by swapping the Width and Height values. This replaces the Rotate Crop Box button. Clicking the Clear button clears the values in the Width and Height fields in the option bar. If displayed, the value in the Resolution field is also cleared.
Default type styles. Face detection enhancements in Color Range. Support for big JPEGs. Photoshop can now open and save JPEG documents up to 65, pixels in width or height. Resizable Color panel. The Color panel is now resizable. New features for all Photoshop CS6 users. Retouching and transforming. Content-Aware Move tool. Content-Aware Patch tool. Redesigned Crop tools. To crop an image, click the Crop tool in the toolbar.
Then either adjust default crop borders in the image window, or drag in the window to start with specific borders. To correct image perspective, hold down the Crop tool and select the Perspective Crop tool For more information, see Crop and straighten photos. Correcting wide-angle lenses. Photographic blur gallery. For more information, see Blur gallery. Lighting Effects gallery. Oil Paint filter. For more information, see Oil Paint filter. Note: In Windows, you install QuickTime separately.
Color and tonal adjustments. Skin tone selection and face detection. Improved auto corrections. Painting and patterns. Erodible brush tips. Airbrush tips. Brush pose. Brush projection. Non-Destructive Editing. There are millions of edits you can make in Photoshop, but know that all edits can be divided into two categories -- destructive and non-destructive.
We recommend avoiding destructive edits whenever a non-destructive method is available. Below are some tips for common destructive edits. University of Michigan Library Research Guides.
Ask a Librarian. Information on Photoshop basics including: how to open and create a new image, navigating pallets, learning the parts of a layer, how to use guides, and where to go for more help at the University of Michigan. Email Me. Schedule an Appointment. This is good for an overlay of a Photo without hard edges from something like a Canon 5D.
JDI Brushes One thing I always found frustrating is when you are trying to sample a color and there are adjustment layers on it. You now have the option to sample a color and ignore the adjustment layers. On top of that you can also sample, current layer, all layers and new is current layer and beneath. Also current and beneath, no adjustments. Not so obvious at first glance though, is how much. Layer filtering has been added.
For someone who can work with hundreds of layers, this is so awesome! You can filter by kind default. These options include images, adjustments, text, vector layers and smart objects. There are also other categories such as name, effect, mode, attribute and color.
There is a long list of attributes that include visible, advanced blending and more. Text is interesting because you can search by layer name. If you are an illustrator, designer or compositor, filtering will save you a ton of time. Speaking of layer names, when renaming layers, press the tab key to advance to the next layer and fill out its name too.
Designers are going to be thrilled about this one. Vector layers are redesigned. You can now define a stroke and a fill for any vector layers including the pen tool and shape layers. The fills can be solid, patterns or gradients. The strokes can be solid, patterns or gradients too. Check this out, yes; there are now dotted and dashed strokes available! You can apply a layer style and flatten the layer in a single click. Also, Layer Styles render in the correct order with shadows on the bottom.
Gradient Layer Styles now include a dither option; this is nice and helps to prevent banding. You can now do batch tasks to multiple layers at once. There is now an indicator to let you know if advanced blending options are used Blend if , double click the icon to open the blending dialog box. There have been a lot of significant changes with type in Photoshop CS6 beta. The biggest thing is type styles.
You can create and use both character and paragraph based type styles. Sure there are some neat tricks and work-arounds, but you no longer need those, full-blown type styles are here. Define your font, color, size and more. You can now apply those saved styles to both individual text blocks and also to paragraph text.
Photoshop CS6 now supports custom ligatures, so you can add those nice pairing of characters as well as different alternative characters, when the font supports them. Another cool addition is Lorem Ipsum. You can now fill paragraphs with placeholder text, so that you can mock up and see what a layout would look like without having to fill with actual text. This is nice, because you no longer have to cut and paste placeholder text from elsewhere.
You can get some really cool patterns using the scripted fills. Select a pattern fill, like you would for any texture fill. The difference is, you can choose a scripted fill to lay out the tiles in different ways rather than just the standard tiling. You can do bricks, weaves, spirals and more.
If you know some scripting, you can even design some of your own. With the recent release of Lightroom 4, there was a slightly broken workflow between Lightroom and Photoshop. All the settings are now nicely synchronized with Lightroom 4, so that round trip editing is now a possibility again. The main change is dropping of the Brightness, Recovery and Fill Light sliders.
The sliders have largely been replaced with Shadow, Highlight, Whites and Blacks. These are more consistent with what we are used to working with in Photoshop. Shadow Highlight replaces Recovery and fill light with some changes to try and eliminate halos in images that are heavenly processed. The Whites and Black set the white and black points in the histogram, much like what you would expect from the white and black slider in Photoshop levels. See the image I quickly ran through it.
Check out the video on processing images in Lightroom 4. But wait. It gets really cool about here. Adobe reworked the video features.
You will notice that the timeline has a new look. Bring video in as a video layer and Photoshop treats it much like the other layers. The big difference is that the video layers contain multiple frames of video.
When you reorder the layers in the Layers panel, their order will also change in the timeline. In time speak, the layers start at the bottom and work their way up the panel, with the last clip being the top-most. If you prefer different video tracks, this can be accomplished by creating a new layer group.
Each group has its own video track. You can even add transitions between different clips. Transitions are added by dropping a transition point on the clip. You can change the type and length of the transition at any time. Where it gets really good is adding effects. You can apply all the same smart filters to video as you would to images, so you can really knock out some professional looks. Speaking of looks you can apply common Color Look Up Table presets to get professional video looks of your video, this is named LUT presets.
Photoshop has supported different video pixel aspect rations for years. As for output, you can output either video or image sequences.
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