Part two of our Tips From Photoshop World series. For part one, click here.
Today I’m going to talk a little bit about one of my favorite features in Photoshop, the adjustment layer. Many of the presenters at Photoshop World emphasized using this tool, so here are a few tips on putting it to stylish use.
When it’s time to make an adjustment to our Photoshop project, most of us choose some of the adjustment tools under the Images>Adjustments drop-down menu. After all, it’s full of useful adjustments like Curves, Color Balance and Brightness/Contrast, among many others.
They’re all helpful (and often necessary), but here’s the problem with making adjustments this way: It applies the result to the whole image. Also, any tweaks you want to make to the resulting effect require you to undo the original and redo it until you are happy with the outcome.
So, here’s a more efficient way. Try applying an adjustment with an adjustment layer. It’s the small black and white circle button at the bottom of your layers palette.
This button will give you a pop-up menu that looks like what you’re used to seeing under Image>Adjustments, but it’s much more user-friendly. When your adjustment is selected and applied, it does not simply affect your whole image and leave it at that. It actually creates a layer in your layers palette that can be turned off and on and even adjusted further. Nifty!
With an adjustment layer, only the layers below your adjustment layer will be affected by the adjustment. This is helpful when you’re working on a Photoshop project that consists of multiple images that may not have been taken with the same camera or under the same conditions. For example, if one component of your project is noticeably lighter than the rest, simply apply a Curves Adjustment Layer directly above the lighter layer, adjust the curves just as you normally would, click OK, then right-click the adjustment layer and choose Create Clipping Mask. This will cause the adjustment layer to only affect the layer directly below it, leaving the rest of your document untouched. If you decide later that the adjustment needs to be tweaked, simply double-click the adjustment layer in your layers palette and make whatever changes you like.
If you have never worked with adjustment layers before, give ‘em a try. Please feel free to let us know if you have any questions when trying this for the first time and enjoy this great new tool!
A couple of us Emma designers recently trekked up to Boston for the Photoshop World Conference and boy, did we come back with some goodies. Yes, we received our fair share of totebags and light-up pens, however, the best souvenir of all was the wealth of everyday Photoshop knowledge we acquired. Considering our design team spends a large percentage of the day working in this program, we couldn’t wait to get back to Nashville and try out some of these new methods with our email stationery design. We quickly realized that implementing our new found knowledge would make for a faster, easier workflow and email template designs that were down-right more stylish.
Sharing what we learned with the rest of our team was a given, but why stop there? Heck, let’s go ahead and share with the entire design community. (My kindergarten teacher would be so proud.)
In an effort to keep this information digestible and shorter than the actual Photoshop World Guidebook itself, we’ve picked out 6 topics that we think you’ll really like. And to start it off, this first one is short & sweet:
One: The very first session I attended at the conference really started the week off with a bang. It was called ‘Painting with Photoshop’ by Bert Monroy. Bert creates these amazing paintings in Photoshop that one would be tempted to call ‘photo-realistic.’ However, Bert’s pieces are considerably more detailed than any photograph ever could be. That’s because his paintings are created at an extremely high resolution and are actually made up of many different files. Use a zooming function on one of his paintings and you will only find more details; whereas in a photo you would quickly find pixels.
Since most of us aren’t sitting in front of our computers creating a thousand layer, hyper-realistic photoshop painting, you might wonder ‘what’s the take away, here?’ Well, the most inspiring thing about Bert’s presentation was that he focused more on his philosophy and thought process rather than on steps to simply copy what he was doing. I really enjoyed the fact that he mostly wanted to share his mentality and then challenged the crowd to apply that to what it is they do.
The funny thing about Bert’s mentality is that while he calls his work ‘paintings,’ he uses the ‘paintbrush tool’ a lot less often than you’d think. Perhaps the reason for this is because he is too busy using almost every other function available in Photoshop. Here are three simple, yet oh-so-useful tips that Bert had to share:
1 – Ignore the actual names of certain tools, effects & functions. They can be used for so much more than they like to claim. For example, the ‘Outer Glow’ layer style sounds pretty self-explanatory, but really, what’s in a name? Who says you couldn’t use this to apply a drop shadow that may or may not be better than the actual ‘Drop Shadow’ effect itself?
To do this:
- simply apply an ‘Outer Glow’
- change the blend mode from ‘screen’ to ‘multiply’
- change your color to a darker shade of your choice
It’s also useful to adjust the size, spread, and opacity. The result is a nice even shadow, whereas the ‘Drop Shadow’ option is usually heavier on certain sides.
2 – Push all the buttons. There are certain features in Photoshop I assume are of no use to me and tend to avoid altogether. But as Bert knows, you can be pleasantly surprised by these neglected tools. So just go ahead and push it.
3 – Slide the scale from one extreme to another. If you are experimenting with a tool or adjustment, make sure to test the way it looks at every setting from -100 to +100. This can sometimes result in perfection.
These tips may be simple, but as Bert’s work has so gracefully reminded us, the possibilities with Photoshop really are endless…if you let them be.
Stay tuned for 5 more installments of Photoshop World goodness in the coming weeks!
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