Photoshop Interface :
The Menu Bar :
At the very top of the screen as always is the Menu Bar,
a common feature of most programs these days. Clicking on the various
menu headings brings up a list of related options and commands. For
example, the File menu is where we find options for opening, saving and closing Photoshop documents. The Layer menu contains options for working with layers. Photoshop's many filters can be found under the Filter menu, and so on:
The Menu Bar in Photoshop CS4 (Extended).
We won't bother going through all the menu options here
since we'd both die of boredom and most of the important options and
commands are covered in our other tutorials. As I mentioned, I'm using
the Mac version of Photoshop CS4. The Photoshop menu option on the far left, which is where we find Photoshop's Preferences on the Mac, is not found in the Windows version. You'll find the Preferences under the Edit menu in Windows. Also, the Analysis and 3D menu headings are exclusive to the Extended version of Photoshop CS4 and not found in the Standard version.The Tools Panel :
The Tools panel in Photoshop CS4.
Again, there's a couple of tools shown here that are exclusive to the Extended version of Photoshop CS4 (the 3D Rotate and 3D Orbit
tools directly above the Hand Tool), but the majority of the tools are
available in both the Standard and Extended versions and most have been
around in Photoshop since forever.
Single Or Double Column Layout :
Photoshop CS4, like CS3 before it, gives us a choice of how
we want the Tools panel displayed. We can leave it in the default
single column, or if you prefer, you can click on the small double-arrow
icon at the top of the panel which will switch it to a double column
layout, handy if you've upgraded from Photoshop CS2 or earlier and you
can't get used to the new single column design. Click again on the icon
to switch back to a single column:
You can switch between a single or double column layout in Photoshop CS4.
Accessing The Hidden Tools :
Click and hold on some tools in the Tools panel to access additional tools behind it.
Click and hold on the other tools in the Tools panel to see all of the tools available to us in Photoshop CS4.
The Options Bar :
Directly related to the Tools panel is the Options Bar at the top of the screen. On a Windows system, the Options Bar is located below the Menu Bar. On a Mac, it's located below the Application Bar which is new to Photoshop CS4. We'll look at the Application Bar in a moment.
Your Options Bar may look different from mine, and that's because it always changes to display options for whichever tool you current have selected. Here, the Options Bar is displaying options for the Move Tool:
New in Photoshop CS4 is the Application Bar.
On a Windows system, you'll find the Application Bar combined with the
Menu Bar at the top of the screen. On a Mac, the Application Bar is
separate and located directly below the Menu Bar:
The Options Bar :
Directly related to the Tools panel is the Options Bar at the top of the screen. On a Windows system, the Options Bar is located below the Menu Bar. On a Mac, it's located below the Application Bar which is new to Photoshop CS4. We'll look at the Application Bar in a moment. Your Options Bar may look different from mine, and that's because it always changes to display options for whichever tool you current have selected. Here, the Options Bar is displaying options for the Move Tool:
The Options Bar displays options for the currently selected tool.
If I select the Crop Tool from the Tools panel, the Options Bar changes to display options for the Crop Tool:
The Options Bar now displaying options for the Crop Tool.
And if I select the Type Tool, we see options displayed for the Type Tool:
The Options Bar now displaying options for the Type Tool.
Every tool has its own set of options which will always be available in the Options Bar.The Application Bar :
The new Application Bar in Photoshop CS4.
The Application Bar itself may be new, but many of the
options you'll find here are not. The bar's main purpose is not really
to wow us with new features (although there are some new ones) but to
give us a central location for some commonly used features, tools and
options rather than having them scattered throughout Photoshop. For
example, the first icon on the left (not counting the blue PS icon in
the Mac version) will quickly open Adobe Bridge:
We can launch Adobe Bridge directly from the new Application Bar in Photoshop CS4.
To the right of that is the View Extras icon, giving us easy access to Photoshop's Guides, Grid and Rulers.
Use the View Extras icon to quickly turn the Guides, Grid or Rulers on or off.
Next is the Zoom Level icon which allows to quickly choose from four preset zoom levels - 25%, 50%, 100% or 200%. You can also type your own zoom level directly into the input box if none of the presets work for you:
Next, we come to a brand new feature in Photoshop CS4, the Rotate View Tool, which also happens to be available in the Tools panel (click and hold on the Hand Tool in the Tools panel and select the Rotate View Tool from the fly-out menu). We'll take an in-depth look at this new feature in another tutorial, but essentially, the Rotate View Tool allows us to rotate our view of the image on screen as if we were rotating a photo on a desk or table, which can make it easier to paint or edit certain areas. What's great about it is that since we're only rotating our view of the image, not the image itself, no pixels are harmed by the rotation and the image will still save, print and export upright. Again, we'll look more closely at the new Rotate View Tool in another tutorial:
Also new in Photoshop CS4 is the Arrange Documents icon which gives us lots of new layouts for viewing multiple documents on screen at once. You'll also find some standard viewing options from the Window menu like Match Zoom and Match Location, but the new multi document layouts are a great new feature and one we'll look at in more depth later:
Along the right side of the screen in Photoshop CS4 is where we find the Panels
column (panels were known as palettes in earlier versions of
Photoshop). Panels give us access to all kinds of commands and options
for working on our images, from organizing layers and viewing individual
color channels to choosing colors, stepping back through history
states, working with text, viewing information about our images, and so
much more. Most of the panels in Photoshop CS4 are the same ones that
have been available in earlier versions of Photoshop, but some, like the
Adjustments Panel, are brand new to CS4:
In the top right corner of the screen is an option that allows us to quickly select from various workspaces,
either ones that are built in to Photoshop CS4 or custom workspaces
we've created ourselves. Workspaces allow us to set up different panel
arrangements, menus and even keyboard shortcuts for different tasks. For
example, you may want certain panels open when editing images and other
panels open when painting with Photoshop's brushes or when working with
type. Workspaces allow us to set up the screen any way we want, save
it, and then quickly select it again any time we need it! Photoshop CS4
comes with several built in workspaces. The Essentials
workspace is selected by default but you can access the complete list of
available workspaces, including any custom ones you've created, by
clicking on the word Essentials and selecting a new workspace from the
list that appears:
The Document Window :
The largest and most obvious interface element in Photoshop is the document window. The document window is where we view our images and where we do all of our editing work:
The last feature we need to look at in our tour of
Photoshop CS4's user interface is brand new and exclusive to the Mac
version of Photoshop CS4, the Application Frame. Before
Windows users start feeling left out and abandoned by Adobe, what the
Application Frame essentially does is give Mac users the Windows
experience (all jokes about random system crashes aside). The
Application Frame places the entire Photoshop interface inside a
self-contained application window, which is how it already works in
Windows and why this feature is only available in the Mac version.
Traditionally, Mac users have been used to Photoshop's interface elements floating around independently on the desktop, and if you're a Mac user and that's how you prefer to work, there's nothing you need to change. However, if you'd prefer to have Photoshop displayed entirely in its own window, similar to the interface style of Adobe Bridge and Lightroom, simply go up to the Window menu in the Menu Bar and choose Application Frame down near the bottom of the list of options:
Use the View Extras icon to quickly turn the Guides, Grid or Rulers on or off.
Next is the Zoom Level icon which allows to quickly choose from four preset zoom levels - 25%, 50%, 100% or 200%. You can also type your own zoom level directly into the input box if none of the presets work for you:
The Zoom Level icon gives us four preset zoom levels to choose from, or type your own into the input box.
Also found in the Application Bar are Photoshop's standard Hand and Zoom Tools which have traditionally been (and still are) found at the bottom of the Tools panel:
Both the Hand Tool and Zoom Tool from the Tools panel are now available in the Application Bar.
The New Rotate View ToolNext, we come to a brand new feature in Photoshop CS4, the Rotate View Tool, which also happens to be available in the Tools panel (click and hold on the Hand Tool in the Tools panel and select the Rotate View Tool from the fly-out menu). We'll take an in-depth look at this new feature in another tutorial, but essentially, the Rotate View Tool allows us to rotate our view of the image on screen as if we were rotating a photo on a desk or table, which can make it easier to paint or edit certain areas. What's great about it is that since we're only rotating our view of the image, not the image itself, no pixels are harmed by the rotation and the image will still save, print and export upright. Again, we'll look more closely at the new Rotate View Tool in another tutorial:
The new Rotate View Tool allows us to rotate our view of the image without actually rotating the image itself.
New Multi Document LayoutsAlso new in Photoshop CS4 is the Arrange Documents icon which gives us lots of new layouts for viewing multiple documents on screen at once. You'll also find some standard viewing options from the Window menu like Match Zoom and Match Location, but the new multi document layouts are a great new feature and one we'll look at in more depth later:
Photoshop CS4 gives us many ways to view multiple documents at once.
Finally, rounding out the options in the new Application Bar is the Screen Mode icon, allowing us to quickly choose between Photoshop CS4's three screen modes - Standard, Full Screen with Menu Bar and Full Screen Mode:
You can quickly switch between screen modes directly from the Application Bar in Photoshop CS4.
The Panels :
The Adjustments Panel is new to Photoshop CS4.
By default, only a handful of panels are displayed on the
screen to begin with, but you can access any of Photoshop's panels at
any time simply by choosing the one you want from the Window
menu up in the Menu Bar. A checkmark beside a panel's name means it's
already open on the screen. Selecting a panel that's already open will
close it. A couple of the panels listed below are available only in the
Extended version of Photoshop CS4, but most are available in the
Standard version:
All of Photoshop CS4's panels can be accessed from the WIndow menu.
To keep things organized and save screen space, most of
Photoshop's panels are grouped in with other related panels. This is
known as a panel group, if you didn't already guess
that on your own. For example, the Layers, Channels and Paths panels are
grouped together by default. To select the panel you want from the
group, simply click on the panel's name tab at the top:
Click on a panel's name tab to select it inside the panel group.
All panels come with various options and commands that are
specific to that panel. You can access these options by clicking on the
panel's menu icon in the top right corner.
Unfortunately, it's not the most obvious thing on the screen and many
Photoshop users don't even know it's there, but you should click on each
panel's menu icon to see what options and commands are available for
it:
Click on a panel's menu icon to view a list of related options and commands.
We'll look at all the different ways we can arrange and organize Photoshop CS4's panels in another tutorial.Workspaces :
Click on the word "Essentials" in the top right corner of the screen to view all the available workspaces.
The Document Window :
The largest and most obvious interface element in Photoshop is the document window. The document window is where we view our images and where we do all of our editing work:
Each image appears inside its own document window.
Document windows in Photoshop do much more though than
simply display the image. They also tell us quite a few things about the
image. At the top of the document window, you'll find the name of the
image, followed by the current zoom level, the color mode, and the
current bit depth:
The top of the document window gives us information about the image.
You'll find even more information at the bottom of the
document window. In the bottom left corner is the zoom level once again,
followed by the current file size of the image, which includes the size
with all layers intact and the size if you were to flatten the image.
If you click on the right-pointing arrow, then choose Show,
you'll see a whole list of details about the image you can view,
including the document dimensions, color profile, and even which tool
you currently have selected from the Tools panel:
Much more information about the image is available at the bottom of the document window.
The Application Frame :
Traditionally, Mac users have been used to Photoshop's interface elements floating around independently on the desktop, and if you're a Mac user and that's how you prefer to work, there's nothing you need to change. However, if you'd prefer to have Photoshop displayed entirely in its own window, similar to the interface style of Adobe Bridge and Lightroom, simply go up to the Window menu in the Menu Bar and choose Application Frame down near the bottom of the list of options:
Go to Window > Application Frame to place Photoshop inside an independent window (Mac version only).
The Application Frame places all interface elements inside a
window, and you can move the entire application around on the screen
simply by clicking anywhere on the gray bar at the top of the frame and
dragging it around:
The Application Frame places all of Photoshop CS4's interface elements inside a self contained, draggable window.
You can resize the Application Frame by simply moving your
mouse cursor to the edges or corners of the frame, then clicking and
dragging to resize it. To exit out of it and return to the Mac's default
view, go back up to the Window menu and choose Application Frame once again to deselect it.
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