Photoshop

Additional Resources

Official Photoshop resources

•   Photoshop Elements product overview
•   Feature tour & training resources


Duke labs with Photoshop

•  CIT Lab (for faculty projects)
•  OIT public Mac/Windows labs
•  OIT Multimedia Project Studio

Overview

What is it? 

Adobe’s Photoshop is one of the most popular image-editing applications for professionals, available for both Macintosh and Windows. Images are imported from a scanner or opened from an existing file. They can then be cropped, color balanced, reduced/enlarged, lightened/darkened, repaired, combined and more. Text, lines, shapes and (with a pressure-sensitive drawing tablet) hand-drawn pictures can be added to images. Edited images can be exported for the Web, video or print.

There are two major types of Photoshop software. Photoshop CS3 versions are aimed at professionals and include advanced filters and color controls mainly used in large-scale print or multimedia projects. Photoshop Elements is a less expensive, scaled-down version aimed at home and hobbyist users and includes all of the features most commonly used for the Web or in presentation programs. The interface for both versions is identical; Elements includes helpful tutorials for many common tasks, particularly those useful in editing digital photos.

Key features

Who uses it?

Photoshop Elements is used by many home and educational users for a range of basic imaging editing tasks, including preparation of graphics for Web pages and retouching of digital photographs and other image files. Photoshop CS is used widely by professional photographers, graphic designers, Web designers and others who work extensively with photographs and images and need sophisticated tools to manipulate them.

How does it work? 

When you open Photoshop, you create a Photoshop document (PSD file) in which you do your work. You can manipulate an existing image, bring in an image directly from a scanner connected to your computer or use the built-in text and drawing tools to create an image from within Photoshop.

The Photoshop interface has a toolbar with a selection of tools for specific actions. For example, the “lasso” tool is for highlighting an area and the textbox is for adding text. Actual manipulation of the image, such as adjusting contrast or skewing an area of an image, is accomplished by selecting items from the menu bar or through simple keyboard shortcuts. When you are finished, you can save the image in Photoshop’s native PSD format to preserve layers, color controls and other information. Or you can export the image in standard formats, such as TIFF, GIF or JPEG for use in Web pages or other types of documents. When choosing some formats, you will be presented with a wizard or control screen that allows you to set options for the saved version of the images, such as the color depth and amount of compression.

Things to consider before using Photoshop  

Uses as an Instructional Technology

Manipulation of images to illustrate course concepts

As a tool to explore graphic design and documentary issues

Resizing digital photos for classroom display and for use in course Web spaces

Resources at Duke


Last modified August 15, 2007 9:34:11 AM EDT