Photoshop Elements 2022 For Dummies. Barbara Obermeier

Читать онлайн.
Название Photoshop Elements 2022 For Dummies
Автор произведения Barbara Obermeier
Жанр Программы
Серия
Издательство Программы
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781119837237



Скачать книгу

box.

       Reset Preferences on Next Launch: Clicking the Restore Default Settings button returns the dialog box to the same settings as when you opened the dialog box. The dialog box stays open for you to set new settings.

      

Of particular importance in the General tab are the items you see for Allow Floating Documents in Expert Mode and Enable Floating Document Window Docking. As we discuss earlier in this chapter (see “Examining the image window”), select these check boxes if you want to undock the document windows from the tabs.

      Checking out all the Preferences panes

      The settings in the Preferences dialog box are organized into different panes that reflect key categories of preferences. The following list briefly describes the types of settings you can adjust in each preferences pane:

       General preferences, as the name implies, apply to general settings you adjust for your editing environment.

       Saving Files preferences relate to options available for saving files. You can change the case of existing filenames; save a file with layers or flatten layers (as we explain in Chapter 9); save files with image previews that appear when you’re viewing files as icons on your desktop (Windows); and save with some compatibility options. On the Mac, the Finder generates thumbnails automatically, so you don’t need to specify thumbnails in a Save dialog box.

       Performance preferences: This pane is where you find history states (explained in Chapter 1) and memory settings, such as allocating memory to Elements.

       Scratch Disks preferences: Below Performance, you find scratch disk options. (See the nearby sidebar “What’s a scratch disk?” for more on scratch disks.) You can monitor how your scratch preferences are working in the image window. See the earlier section, “Examining the image window,” for details.

       Display & Cursors preferences: This pane offers options for how certain tool cursors are displayed and how you view the Crop tool when you’re cropping images. Chapter 10 explains how cropping works.

       Transparency preferences: These require an understanding of how Elements represents transparency. Imagine painting a portrait on a piece of clear acetate. The area you paint is opaque, and the area surrounding the portrait is transparent. To display transparency in Elements, you need some method to represent transparent areas. (Chapter 8 has more details.) Open the Transparency preferences and make choices for how transparency appears in Elements.

       Units & Rulers preferences: Here you can specify settings for ruler units, column guides, and document preset resolutions.

       Guides & Grid preferences: This pane offers options for gridline color, divisions, and subdivisions. A grid shows you nonprinting horizontal and vertical lines. You use a grid to align objects, type, and other elements. You can snap items to the gridlines to make aligning objects much easier. You can drag guides (sometimes called guidelines) from the ruler and position them between gridlines.

       Plug-Ins preferences: These preferences include options for selecting an additional Plug-Ins folder. Plug-ins are third-party utilities that work with Elements. For example, you can find plug-ins that offer editing features not found in Elements, enable many different adjustments for brightness/contrast and color correction, and provide some nifty special effects. You can find many free plug-ins on the Internet by searching for Photoshop Elements Plug-Ins.

       Adobe Partner Services: Here you can control whether Elements automatically checks for new services, clears the online stored data, and resets your account information for all services.

       Application Updates: You can choose to automatically update Elements or receive a notification that an update is available.

       Type preferences: This pane provides options for setting text attributes. You have options for using different quotation marks, showing Asian characters, showing font names in English, and previewing font sizes.

       Country/Region Selection: You can select your country or region from the drop-down menu.

      WHAT’S A SCRATCH DISK?

      Assume that you have 1GB of free RAM (your internal computer memory) and you want to work on a picture that consumes 1.25GB of hard drive space. Elements needs to load all 1.25GB of the file into RAM. Therefore, an auxiliary source of RAM is needed for you to work on the image. Elements uses your hard drive. When a hard drive is used as an extension of RAM, this source is a scratch disk.

      If you have more than one hard drive connected to your computer, you can instruct Elements to use all hard drives, and you can select the order of the hard drives that Elements uses for your extension of RAM. All disks and media sources appear in a list as 1, 2, 3, 4, and so on.

      Perusing preset libraries

      Part of the fun of image editing is choosing brush tips, swatch colors, gradient colors, and patterns to create the look you want. To get you started, Elements provides you with a number of preset libraries that you can load and use when you want. For example, you can load a Brushes library to acquire different brush tips that you can use with the Brush tool and the Eraser tool. But you’re likely to want to customize the preset libraries at least a little bit, too.

Snapshot of the Preset Manager dialog box provides a central area where you can change libraries.

      FIGURE 3-16: The Preset Manager dialog box provides a central area where you can change libraries.

      We cover using the presets in Chapter 13, which is where you can find out how to use the many presets that Elements provides. The important thing to note here is that you can change the presets according to your editing needs.

      To open the Preset Manager dialog box, choose Edit ⇒ Preset Manager. The available options in the dialog box are

       Learn More About: The Preset Manager: Click the blue Preset Manager hyperlinked text to open the Help document and find out more about managing presets.

       Done: Any changes you make in the Preset Manager are recorded and saved when you click Done.

       Preset Type: Open the drop-down list to choose from Brushes, Swatches, Gradients, Styles, Patterns, and Effects.

       Append: Click the Append button to append a library to the existing library open in the Preset Manager.

       Add: Click this button to open another library. Elements allows you to choose from several libraries for each preset type. When you choose