1. Open a new document with your favourite photo: 2. Once you got that done, make a new layer and fill it with white color. That will be your "Canvas"....
1) Get a nice artistic picture, I used this flower pictere it has really nice soft colors and there isn't a real background.2) Duplicate your layer (ctrl+J) Then add an...
Color modesPhotoshop lets you choose a color mode for each document. The color mode determines what color method is used to display and print the image you're working on. By...
Art Graffiti On a Wall1. Open up any image you want to open.2. Now, first we are going to make the picture look like it's a "drawing", so we are...
About monitors and color workAlthough the RGB color model used by computer monitors can display much of the visible spectrum, the video system sending data to a given monitor often...
Understanding color managementNo device in a publishing system is capable of reproducing the full range of colors viewable to the human eye. Each device operates within a specific color space...
Adobe'scolor management system helps you maintain the appearance of colors as you bring images in from external sources, edit documents and transfer them between Adobe applications, and output your finished...
Working with color profiles About color profiles Precise, consistent color management requires accurate ICC-compliant profiles of all of your color devices. For example, without an accurate scanner profile, a perfectly...
Color settings To customize color settings For most color-managed workflows, it is best to use a preset color setting which has been tested by Adobe Systems. Changing specific options is...
1. Start off with a new image of your size with a black backgound. Create a new layer (we're only going to use one layer in this tutorial so don't...
Specifying Default Resolution for New Preset Documents When you create a new preset for a custom document size in the File>New dialog box, Photoshop uses the resolution values set in...
Comparing Documents for Differences Sometimes you need to compare two files that might look identical when opened but that you suspect differ in some minor detail. You can do this...