Sponsored by the National Association of Photoshop Professionals. Learn More
As you learned earlier, you can have more than one Bridge window open at a time (which is great for looking at different collections of images at the same time). Well, if you’re going to be working with multiple windows, you’re going to want to know this shortcut, which toggles you back and forth between open Bridge windows. It’s Command-Shift-˜ (that’s the Tilde key, found right above the Tab key on your keyboard). Note: Unfortunately for PC users, this shortcut doesn’t work.
No comments yet.
RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI
Corey jazzed up this photo by making a custom brush and applying an outer glow layer style to create the repeating patterns
Using a mixture of filters and blending modes, Corey takes a stock photo and transforms it into an old, classic 1950’s pin-up poster.
Instead of using a displacement map, here’s another method for taking a custom file and distorting it to match a background image.
Corey stumbled upon this effect while experimenting with the smudge tool and its finger painting feature. Start off by
Problem: All of a sudden, every time you click on a layer with the Move tool, it jumps to that layer. Solution: Somehow you turned on a feature called Auto Select Layer, which lets you make a layer active by just clicking on it with the Move tool. To turn this feature off, press V to get the Move tool, and up in the Options Bar, turn off the checkbox for Auto Select Layer. Besides, you never really need to turn this feature on, because you can just hold the Command key (PC: Control key) and click on any layer in your image window.