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Saturday, July 24, 2010

PostHeaderIcon Set the Preferences for the Way You Work

In addition to Color Settings, Photoshop includes ten different panes in the Preferences dialog box. Although you can work with the default settings, changing some of these can make your computer run more efficiently, and changing others can make it easier to work with your projects. For example, by default, Photoshop is set to use more than half of the available RAM. You can lower this default setting depending on how much RAM you have installed in the computer and how many other applications you keep open at the same time. You can change the default colors for the guides and grid when they are too similar to those in your image. Setting an additional plug-ins folder keeps third-party items separate from included Photoshop plug-ins, and setting a separate scratch disk can speed up your work on large files. Other personalized options, such as asking Photoshop to automatically launch the Bridge, can help you use Photoshop the way you want. Read through each Preferences pane to familiarize yourself with the choices. Select the settings to fit your workflow and make Photoshop work for you.




1. Click Photoshop (Edit).
2. Click Preferences.
3. Click General. The General Preferences dialog
box appears.



4. Click any arrows to change your
settings.
5. Click to select the options you
want or deselect those you do
not want.
6. Click Next to continue The dialog box
changes to the
Interface Preferences.
customizing Preferences.




7. Click to select the
options you want or
deselect those you do
not want.
8. Click Next.




9. Make any other changes that you prefer
in the other Preferences panes.
10. Click OK when you have cycled through
all the Preferences panes.
11. Click Photoshop (File).
12. Click Quit Photoshop (Exit).
The next time you start the application,
your own settings take effect.

Did You Know?
You can use keyboard shortcuts to set the Preferences. Press Ô+K (Ctrl+K). Set your ptions for the General Preferences. Press Ô+2 (Ctrl+2), and so on, for each of the ten Preferences panes.
Thursday, July 22, 2010

PostHeaderIcon Select the Color Settings for Your Projects

Using Adobe Photoshop CS3 is an image-altering experience! You can work on images for print or for the Web. You can improve photographs, repurpose them, or create original designs. Because printed images and Web images have different limits on the range of colors that they can represent, you need to set the working color space for your project.Photoshop’s default color space is set to sRGB, a very limited color space intended to be viewable on even the lowest-quality monitor. sRGB is a good color space for preparing Web images; however, it is a much smaller color space than what better monitors can show and what printers can actually produce. Photographers and designers generally prefer the
larger color space called Adobe RGB (1998), a good color space for working with photographs and projects that you plan to print. In Photoshop CS3, you can easily choose your color space and save it as your own setting. Using the North America Prepress 2 settings and Adobe RGB (1998) will make your printed colors look much better.




1.Click Edit.

2. Click Color Settings. The Color Settings dialog box
appears.

3 Click here and select North
America Prepress 2.

4 Click More Options.  The dialog box expands.


5 Click here and select Perceptual for
photography or Relative Colorimetric
for a graphic design project.

6 Click OK.
Your color settings are saved until
you reset your preferences.



Note: You can save your own Color Settings preset. The name of the preset changes
to Custom when you deselect any check box or make any other changes. Click Save after customizing your settings. Type a name in the Save dialog box and click Save. Your customized preset appears in the Settings drop-down list, ready for you to choose.