6 Totally Essential Photoshop Skills Even Your Mom Should Know
Posted 03/11/09 at 01:00:00 PM by Florence Ion
For more than a decade, Adobe Photoshop has been the de facto image-editing program used by professionals and art students alike. But there are plenty of casual users who only dabble with Photoshop for simple tasks, such as photo resizing and cropping -- oblivious to the sheer power of Photoshop's graphics manipulation abilities. These decidedly non-power users (and we know some of you are included in this group) can do so more with this versatile program -- and we're here to show you how.
Whether you've just installed Photoshop for the first time or know your away around a the Tools toolbar, we put together a few of the most essential Photoshop skills to get you started on your photo editing endeavors. Before you know it, you'll be fixing up your grandmother's torn-up black and white wedding photos and airbrushing the heck out of yourself for your Facebook photo.
Create an Action Script to resize a large batch of photos
Understanding how to record an action script is vital to becoming a Photoshop power user. Actions can help increase productivity by using prerecorded macros to emulate repetitive tasks, allowing you to step away while your computer automatically gets the job done. In this particular tutorial, we'll show you how to resize a large batch of photos, but you can record virtually any action that may be neccessary to your Photoshop needs, including color correction, level adjustment or even applying filters.
1. Before you start this project, we suggest that you gather your images from their respective locations and place them all in one folder. This way, it will make it much easier to save a huge batch of images and access them afterward.

Fire up Photoshop and open up a photo from the set you’ve previously isolated. At this point, we only need one photo to record the action.
2. Go to Window - Actions, or use the shortcut keys Alt + F9. Click the “New Action” button. A dialog box will pop up asking you to give it a name. You also have the option to set the action as one of your defaults or assign it a function key.
3. Press the red circle in the actions palette and get ready to record. Remember that everything you do from this point on is tracked and added to the new action, so make sure that any tool you utilize follows in the precise order you'd want your macro to emulate.
Resize the photos to your desired width and height, then Save for Web... and select the file type you would like to save your image as. We suggest that you save your photos as high resolution JPEGs for use on the web, or otherwise, PNG.
4. Close your image and select the Stop symbol on the Actions palette. Your Macro should be all set for your batch of photos. Locate the folder where you stored your photos beforehand and load them all up in Photoshop.
5. Go to File – Automate – Batch; a new dialogue window will open up. Under Play – Set, which should automatically set to Default Actions, select the name of the Action you just created.
Under Source, make sure that the option Open Files is selected. Destination should be set to none, since you’ve already recorded that in your action. Click OK, sit back, and observe your macro in action.
Alternatively, you can manually set a destination for your resized images, and use the File Naming section of the Batch Process window to add prefixes, suffixes, or sequential numbers to your newly resized images. If you do this, make sure to check the "Over Action 'Save As' Commands" box as well.
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Why are they using macs to
Submitted by pellier on Fri, 03/20/2009 - 7:35am
Why are they using macs to do this? Isn't this Maximum PC
umm k, great tips! now
Submitted by smashingpumpin on Wed, 03/11/2009 - 7:37pm
umm k, great tips! now where's the part to make fake celebs? lol
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Flash Spots
Submitted by Darth Ninja on Wed, 03/11/2009 - 7:33pm
Kind of funny, but am I the only one that thinks the final image looks worse then the starting one for the "Remove Flash Spots" bit?
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DarthNinja
www.DarthNinja.com
Woops
Submitted by knexkid on Wed, 03/11/2009 - 1:58pm
Tip number 3:
Use Level Adjustments and Color Correction to bring an photo to lifeAn photo? An hero? An computer? An elephant? Ahh, there we go....
great article though!
Photoshop Elements can do most of this, too
Submitted by Marcus_Soperus on Wed, 03/11/2009 - 10:23am
In recent versions, Photoshop Elements has been revved up so it can perform almost all of the tips in this article. You will need to use a different selection tool for cutting out an object (such as magnetic lasso) and PSE lacks Actions,, but other stuff like adjustment layers (kudos for mentioning this) are in both PSE and its full-powered sibling. In PSE, you can use the File menu's option to process multiple photos to perform resizing or conversion to other formats.
BTW, if you use multiple adjustment layers, you can really change how the finished photo works by changing layer order.
BTW #2: if you want to print your newly-improved creations at a photofinishing kiosk or online printing service, stick with maximum-quality JPEG; these services usually don't understand other formats.
Thanks for the article!
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It's amazing how illogical a business built on binary logic can be.
"Create an Action Script to
Submitted by xveganx on Wed, 03/11/2009 - 9:23am
"Create an Action Script to resize a large batch of photos"
is there a way to do this with the GIMP?
This seems like great tips
Submitted by MAXPCreader07 on Wed, 03/11/2009 - 7:51am
This seems like great tips except I use The GIMP not Photoshop.
Have you ever heard of Gimp
Submitted by Keith E. Whisman on Wed, 03/11/2009 - 9:35am
Have you ever heard of Gimp Shop? It's supposed to be TheGimp but with all the looks and feel of Photoshop and I have heard that it also has the same functionality so that if you really know photoshop then GimpShop will be second nature. So I would assume all these features will work but I don't know as I use neither. I just push the button on my camera and hope for the best.
Great
Submitted by sinan on Wed, 03/11/2009 - 7:48am
I always did things the hard way in photoshop. I always meant to look up some tutorials to learn some useful tricks but never found the time or was too intimidated. These are neat little things to do.
Anyone knows of a good site with such tutorials that I can check out?
Thanks
try this
Submitted by yogurt80 on Wed, 03/11/2009 - 11:31am
try this http://photoshopforums.com/ and http://biorust.com/
tutorialoutpost.com thats
Submitted by dracx619 on Wed, 03/11/2009 - 10:58am
tutorialoutpost.com
thats where i learned photoshop almost 6 years ago
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