Tag: photoshop

  • Dribbble’d a space shot this afternoon.

  • Photoshop Tip: Disable Hyphenation in New Documents

    Webpage Photoshop comps look silly with paragraphs auto-hyphenated. This is almost never what a web designer wants. In order to turn off hyphenation for all new documents, proceed with the following steps: Open Photoshop. Close all open documents. Select the Paragraph panel. Uncheck “Hyphenate” checkbox. Result: All new documents have “Hyphenate” unchecked, solving all your…

  • Needed in Photoshop: proportional leading/line height as in CSS

    Needed in Photoshop: proportional leading/line height as in CSSIt’s always bothered me that I cannot effortlessly create proportional line height in Photoshop. The leading widget in the Character panel should use a multiplier of the font size—as in InDesign or CSS. For example, I could set my text to 24px and the leading to a…

  • Quick note on why you should always use Progressive JPEGs if larger than 10KB

    Lately I’ve been doing a ton of reading on decreasing website load time, image optimization techniques, responsive loading for different devices, and every detail I can find in between. One quick takeaway is that I will always tick the “progressive” checkbox in Photoshop’s Save for Web dialog from now on when saving JPEGs larger than…

  • Jacob Bijani: I had no idea this existed in Photoshop. It takes a list of files or folders and places each one on it’s own layer in a new document. I’ve been looking for something like this.

  • I ♥ John Nack

    I ♥ John NackPhotoshop may have its problems, but it’s an incredibly powerful and useful application that many people use to produce tons of content (and produce dollars in their bank accounts). John Nack, part of the Adobe Photoshop team, is always level-headed and insightful.

  • iPad actions for Photoshop

    iPad actions for Photoshop Create iPad 1024×768 screenshot Click button for instant, Apple-style marketing

  • Photoshop Secret Shortcuts

    Photoshop Secret ShortcutsUse these tips if you want to be like David Kaneda, who works Photoshop with no palettes.

  • Selecting hair with Refine Edge in Adobe Photoshop CS5 is pretty amazing.