Sponsored by the National Association of Photoshop Professionals. Learn More
If you’re working in the Curves dialog (Command-M [PC: Control-M]) and you want to make more than one point active at the same time, click on one point (to make it active) then hold the Shift key and click on another. As long as the Shift key is held down, you can click on as many points as you’d like to make them active at the same time.
No comments yet.
RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI
This crumpled paper effect starts with designing a piece of notebook paper and then applying a displacement map
The steps for creating this pirate text effect start with converting a text layer into paths in order to reshape
In this tutorial, Corey creates an animated background using Adobe Photoshop CS3 Extended.
Corey recreates a video game logo by building a grid background and circular target using the define pattern
When you’re working in Curves (Command-M [PC: Control-M]), once you’ve plotted a curve point, you can rotate over to the next point in your curve by pressing Control-Tab (PC: Right-click-Tab). To rotate back to the previous point, add the Shift key to make it Shift-Control-Tab (PC: Shift–Right-click-Tab). If you’ve got one or more points selected and want to deselect all your points, just press Command-D (PC: Control-D) to release all your points.