Saturday, August 21, 2010

Cruising the Main Menus

Now we come to the menu bar. The menus listed here give you a good comprehensive idea of what you can accomplish in Photoshop. In this section, I show you the primary purpose of each menu and highlight some of the menu options that might not be covered in other areas of the book. As you learn how to use the Photoshop tools later in my tutorials, you learn so much more about many of the menu options, so for now, I just give you a brief overview.

The File menu
The File menu has many of the options that you would expect, and many of them are self-explanatory. For the most part, all the options listed are different ways to open, save, or export your documents.

The Edit menu
Again, this menu is a familiar menu found in most applications with many familiar options. Above and beyond cut, copy, and paste, you can step backward, undoing several of the last changes you made. Farther down the menu, you find the transformation edits-Content-Aware Scale and Puppet Warp among them.

The Image menu
The Image menu is loaded with lots of options for changing your image. Making changes to your image is different than making changes to your file, because these options actually affect the look of your image.

The options in your Image menu let you change the color mode, resize, rotate, or duplicate your image, among other things. Neatly tucked into the Image adjustments menu you find some of the most powerful tools for correcting the color and light of your image.

The Layer menu
The Layer menu is built specifically for use with the Layers panel. Layers are an important part of working efficiently and non-destructively in Photoshop, and you want to learn all you can about how they work.

The Select menu
You might not have thought that an entire menu could be dedicated to selections. The Selection tools are some of the most powerful tools in Photoshop. They allow you to create masks, cut precise areas out of an image, and edit only specific parts of the image. The Toolbox contains several Selection tools, and they are covered, along with the Selection menu.

The Filter menu
Filters are placed over images to change their appearance. There are corrective filters such as Sharpen and Reduce Noise, and there are also special effect filters that can make your image look like it is being viewed through rippled glass or embossed into chrome. Filters are most definitely the fun side of Photoshop.

The Analysis menu
The Analysis menu is all about measuring and, of course, analyzing areas in your document. You can customize the tools found here for your own use to measure, scale, and mark your images. You can choose from six menu options. I don’t list them in the order they appear in the Analysis menu because they make more sense in the order listed.

Ruler tool
The Ruler tool is simply a tool that allows you to drag from one area in your image to another and measure it. The measurement information is displayed in the Info panel. By default, the measurement is displayed in pixels. The Ruler tool plays an important role in the other options found in the Analysis menu.

Count tool
Selecting the Count tool and clicking your document leaves a number behind, in increments of one. This allows you to count and mark multiple items in your image. If you were trying to count a flock of birds, for instance, you would click each bird until each one had been marked. The last number placed would be the number of birds in the photo.

Record Measurements
Clicking Record Measurements opens the Measurement Log panel on the bottom of your document window, as shown in Figure 2.7. As you create measurements, click the Record Measurements button on the Measurement Log panel and the measurement details are recorded.
Notice that the first measurement was taken by the Ruler tool, and the second measurement was taken by the Count tool.

You also can use the Measurement Log to export these measurements. Simply click the Export icon to export the measurements as a text file to any specified location. You also can access the Measurement Log menu by clicking the menu icon.

FIGURE 2.7
The Measurement Log panel allows you to record and display measurements you have taken within your document.

Set Measurement Scale
The measurement scale can be set to Default, which simply means that one pixel is equal to one pixel. If you choose the custom option, however, it allows you to translate a set number of pixels in your document to any other measurement you prefer.

For instance, in Figure 2.8, if I know the measurement of the right window pane is 20 inches, I can choose Analysis ➪ Measurement Scale ➪ Custom to open the Measurement Scale dialog box. The Measurement Scale dialog box automatically activates the Ruler tool so I can measure from the bottom of the window pane to the top. In the photo, this measurement is 225 pixels, shown as the pixel length in Figure 2.8. From here, I can enter any relative measurement that I choose—in this case, 20 inches. I could have just as easily entered 1 foot, 3 meters, or 7 girth units. I can save this measurement scale by clicking Save Preset and naming it.

After closing the Measurement Scale dialog box, I can activate the Ruler tool and measure other areas of the photo. These measurements are recorded in the Measurement Log panel. Notice that the third measurement in Figure 2.7 was taken after the Measurement Scale was set. The scale indicates that 225 pixels = 20 inches; the scale unit is inches and the length is 20 (rounded up, of course).

FIGURE 2.8
You can set a measurement scale to record any type of measurement you want.


Set Data Points
The Measurement Log shows data on each measurement you record. You can choose what data to keep and display by selecting specific data points. Click Analysis ➪ Select Data Points ➪ Custom to display the Select Data Points dialog box. In this dialog box, you can deselect the types of information that you don’t want recorded. For instance, if you don’t require date and time information, deselect the box next to Date and Time. Every measurement you take after this point no longer displays the date and time in the Measurement Log panel.

Place Scale Marker
You can place a scale marker in your image to denote scale. Figure 2.9 shows a scale marker in the window indicating the length of 20 inches in the document. To place a scale marker, choose Place Scale Marker from the Analysis menu to open the dialog box. You can choose the length of the scale by selecting more than one unit of measurement.
In Figure 2.9, the unit of measurement is indicated by 20 inches, the measurement set by the measurement scale. If I were to change the number from 1 to 2, my scale marker would appear twice as long and be labeled “40 inches.” You also can choose to display the text and what font and size that text will be. Finally, you have the choice to display the scale marker at the top or bottom of your document and in black or white.
The Measurement Log shows data on each measurement you record. You can choose what data to keep and display by selecting specific data points. Click Analysis ➪ Select Data Points ➪ Custom to display the Select Data Points dialog box. In this dialog box, you can deselect the types of information that you don’t want recorded. For instance, if you don’t require date and time information, deselect the box next to Date and Time. Every measurement you take after this point no longer displays the date and time in the Measurement Log panel.

Place Scale Marker
You can place a scale marker in your image to denote scale. Figure 2.9 shows a scale marker in the window indicating the length of 20 inches in the document. To place a scale marker, choose Place Scale Marker from the Analysis menu to open the dialog box. You can choose the length of the scale by selecting more than one unit of measurement.

In Figure 2.9, the unit of measurement is indicated by 20 inches, the measurement set by the measurement scale. If I were to change the number from 1 to 2, my scale marker would appear twice as long and be labeled “40 inches.” You also can choose to display the text and what font and size that text will be. Finally, you have the choice to display the scale marker at the top or bottom of your document and in black or white.

FIGURE 2.9
Placing a scale marker in your image allows you to clearly see the scale of the image.


The 3D menu
The 3D menu is packed full of goodies for helping you work in the 3D environment. The 3D environment allows you to bring in 3D models and use the powerful Photoshop tools to make incredible changes to their appearance.

The View menu
The View menu has the basic options for adjusting the view of your document, such as its size (fit screen, actual pixels, print size, and so on) and screen mode (full screen, full screen with menus, and standard screen) that I discussed earlier in this tutorial. The proof options let you soft-proof your documents before printing.

Extras and Show
You might find it interesting that the Extras option allows you to see non-printing guides like selections, bounding boxes, and grids. If you deselect the Extras option, any of these items that are visible in your document disappear. The Show menu lets you customize which non-printing items are visible.

Ruler
Select the Ruler option if you want Rulers to appear in your document window. The rulers start at 0 in the upper-left corner of your document and measure the actual print size of your document.

Snap and Snap To
As you move things around in your work area, whether they are selections, panels, or objects, you can choose to have them snap to the guides or to other objects. For instance, as you customize your panels, they snap together so you can easily place them right next to each other with no space between them and no overlaps.

The Snap To option lets you choose what elements your objects snap to: guides, grids, layers, and so on. The elements that have a check mark will draw objects you are moving, like a magnet. If you want to place things without the guides snapping them one way or the other, just deselect Snap in the View menu and you have full control.

New Guide, Lock Guides, and Clear Guide
The line under text and the bounding box around a placement in your document are guides. They help you see and move such objects. You can make your own guides to help you with placement and alignment in your document. Select View ➪ New Guide, and select whether you want the guide to run vertically or horizontally and where you want it placed in your image. The New Guide dialog box asks you how many inches into your image you want the guide placed, so it’s helpful to have the rulers on.

You also can lock these guides so you don’t accidentally move them or clear them out of the way entirely by choosing Lock Guides or Clear Guides.

Lock Slice and Clear Slices
The Lock Slices and Clear Slices options allow you to lock slices from being altered and to clear the
existing slices so you can easily clean them up.

The Window menu
The Window menu is a comprehensive list of the panels that are available to you. From this menu, you can select the panels that you want to be visible. When a panel is visible, a check mark appears next to it. Selecting a visible panel makes the panel invisible; selecting a hidden panel makes the panel visible.

The Help menu
The Help menu contains information about and help for Photoshop and the plug-ins that are installed. It also contains Web links to various sites that Adobe thinks might be of interest to you.
The two menu options worth noting are Photoshop Help and Deactivate.

Photoshop Help
Photoshop Help is a great resource that can be very helpful if you are stuck figuring something out. Click the Help link, and you are taken to the Photoshop Help Web site where you can browse through the Help contents, search the Adobe Help resources, or even show articles and threads from others who are looking for and adding help.

Deactivate
This menu option is one that is absolutely imperative for you to know. When you install Photoshop on your computer and activate it, Adobe keeps a record of it. After you have done this twice (with the single-user application, at any rate), Adobe doesn’t allow you to activate your product and you can’t use it. This obviously keeps you from passing your copy of Photoshop to your friends, neighbors, and your cousin’s boyfriend’s sister-in-law.

Adobe’s anti-piracy feature becomes a problem, however, if you are restructuring your system or purchasing a new computer. In order to reinstall Photoshop on a new system, you need to deactivate it on the old one. Go to the Help menu and choose Deactivate. Doing so allows you to activate your software the next time you install it.

In this tutorial:
  1. Photoshop Workspace 
  2. Workspace Overview 
  3. The Document Workspace 
  4. The Application Bar 
  5. The Workspace Presets 
  6. The Toolbox and Tool Options Bar 
  7. Cruising Main Menus 
  8. Understanding Panels 
  9. Understanding Tools in Toolbox 
  10. Using Presets 
  11. Setting Preferences 
  12. Interface Preferences 
  13. File Handling Preferences 
  14. Transparency Gamut Preferences 
  15. Customizing Shortcuts and Menus

2 comments:

  1. A great post on "cruising main menus". a fabulous post with the in-depth description on each and every point mentioned here. Keep going with some more good stuff.

    ReplyDelete
  2. So nice and useful article . So much thanks .

    ReplyDelete