SPECIAL FEATURE
September 25th, 2007
written by Bet-TAY Morgan, "special features editor"
TRAINING RESOURCE REVIEW:
How to Wow - Best of Photoshop CS3
a CD-ROM With Jack Davis
Let one of the greatest teachers of Photoshop gives you a tour of Photoshop CS3. This training is packed with indispensable insights, techniques and time-savers to make your experience in Photoshop CS3 more productive. Jack will demonstrate the new Adobe Bridge, Camera Raw, Smart Filters, Quick Select Tools, Photomerge and more.
Session 01 : Essentials of the New Bridge (38 minutes) Another overview of the CS3 new Bridge, including the workflow time-saver Photo Downloader, the indispensable Filter Panel, the new Loupe, Compare and Stacks Views, Customized Workspace options, and even some essential lifesavers hidden away in Preferences.
Jack shares a quick and simple way of creating metadata information in the Bridge. This has given me a whole new outlook on filing my photographs so that I can find photo files a year later without having to open every folder. This isn't new to the Bridge, but it's something that I've never seen explained and implemented in a training video.
Session 02 : Essentials of Camera Raw 4 (46 minutes)
This session showcases the incredible breakthroughs pertaining to a streamlined, nondestructive workflow that has come to us in the new Adobe Camera Raw 4, including the indispensable new Healing Brush, Highlight and Shadow Recovery sliders, Vibrance and targeted HSL controls, and the best Black & White and Split Tone features to be found anywhere. Plus more essentials hidden away in Preferences.
Session 03 : Maximizing the Photoshop CS3 New Interface (13 minutes)
This section has some interesting ideas on how to set up the the preferences, shortcuts to pallets, personalization for a speedier workflow... very informative.
Session 04 : Smart Filters, Objects and Adjustments (21 minutes)
WOW! I'm convinced that Camera Raw is valuable and eliminates having 10 copies of the same file. This lesson gets Smart Filters, Objects and Adjustments under your belt. And even though many of its capabilities (that go way beyond simply applying filters) are buried in multiple dialogs, it gives the ability to do virtually everything in one layered file -- from raw tonal adjustments, to retouching, to collaging: without ever permanently altering a single pixel!