PHOTOSHOP

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Adobe Photoshop CS6 - By DARKR



What's new in Photoshop?
Adobe® Photoshop® CS6 software delivers even more image editing power, new creative options, and the Adobe Mercury Graphics Engine for blazingly fast performance. Retouch with new Content-Aware features, and create superior designs as well as movies using new and reimagined tools and workflows.

TIME TO BE PIRATES!




~ Mac|Life

It’s summer, so that must mean heat, humidity--and, in 2010--time for a new update to the Adobe suite of apps, including the flagship of the fleet, Photoshop. The CS5 iteration is a significant step forward, for reasons big and small, and overall, it’s one of the strongest upgrades in the 20 years that Photoshop has graced hard drives around the world.

Those working with tricked-out Macs loaded with RAM will deeply appreciate the fact that Photoshop CS5 finally takes us into the 64-bit world, providing support for as much RAM as you’ve jammed into your machine. That significantly speeds up performance when working with densely layered, print-resolution imagery--from applying filters to saving files and everything in between. Of course, you’ll need Snow Leopard and loads of RAM to exploit this, but you already knew that.

http://www.maclife.com/files/u129772/2010/06/photoshopbefore_full.jpg
http://www.maclife.com/files/u129772/2010/06/photoshopafter_full_0.jpg

Check out Content-Aware Fill at work! The original photo is above, and in the "after" shot on the bottom, the flowers were automagically vanished.

In the “cool enough to be science fiction” department, the most potentially jaw-dropping new feature is Content-Aware Fill, which is much sexier than the name suggests. It lets you draw a crude lasso selection around an element you want to remove from a complex background--say, some people standing in front of a stone wall--and Photoshop CS5 automatically fills in the resulting hole by applying some serious image-processing mojo on the surrounding area. It’s not always perfect, but when well-used, it’s nothing short of astonishing.

For advanced masking nerds, the new edge-processing technology tucked into the Refine Edges dialog helps create really clean edges on challenging selections that normally present an extra challenge--think hair, fur, and other finely detailed nightmares that have long plagued expert retouchers. These two new additions alone are reason enough for any CS4 owner involved in heavy image editing to bite the upgrade bullet.

If you’ve always wanted Painter-level brushes in Photoshop, you’ll enjoy the flexibility of the new Mixer Brush and extensive Bristle options, which deliver sweet natural-media effects that make heavy use of a Wacom-style graphics tablet. Puppet Warp is a very powerful new tool that allows you to bend and distort images using “virtual pushpins,” turning any photograph into pliable Play-Doh. It’s very different from the Liquify filter, and was derived from After Effects, where it’s used to make South Park–like animation.

But at the end of the day, Photoshop is about photographs, and shutterbugs will deeply appreciate the new noise-reduction code built into the Camera Raw plug-in, which will change how you approach shooting pushed ASA settings in low-light situations. It does an amazing job of minimizing--and often completely eliminating--pesky noise artifacts. The tweaked Camera Raw-Sharpening is really stunning, just when we thought that Smart Sharpen was already fantastic.

HDR (High Dynamic Range) Pro is tailored toward giving photographers the maximum quality when compositing multiple exposures, and we were pleasantly surprised to discover that you can now apply the hyper-realistic HDR look to single images shot conventionally--a nice creative touch. Pro photographers will also appreciate the combination of the newly automatic Lens Correction filter in conjunction with the release of a new lens distortion profiler, which lets you tailor the results to your specific digital camera--cool stuff.

The Extended version of CS5 is now all about 3D, including something exotically dubbed Repoussé, which finally delivers some workable 3D extrusion tools to the 3D menu. While you’ll find it useful for some basic 3D logo work, it’s still not even close to being a replacement for a separate 3D modeling and rendering program. When it comes to the issue of final render quality, Adobe’s ray tracer simply doesn’t justify the Extended package’s premium pricing.
Photoshop CS5 is one of the most compelling versions we’ve ever seen, delivering a wide array of new toys that really make this a powerful imaging application. If you’ve been hanging back for a while, it’s time to take the plunge.





CreativePro

Rating: 90 out of 100

With the release of CS5, the twenty-year-old Photoshop has reached version 12. For a program this old mature, a major upgrade doesn't usually bring huge changes. The CS5 interface is largely the same, and the fundamentals of the program are unchanged. That's good: Dramatic alterations in the everyday functions of a mission critical tool can really slow you down. But there are powerful new additions to Photoshop's toolset, and enough improvements to make this a compelling upgrade. No matter how you use Photoshop, you'll probably find something to love in CS5.

The full version of Photoshop CS5 costs $699; the upgrade is $199. It's also part of five Creative Suite packages. Note that this review does not address features that are only in the Extended version of Photoshop.

Easy Retouching and Improved Masking
Photoshop's CS5's Content Aware Fill feature has received a lot of press, and with good reason. It's a tool that will come in handy for for all Photoshop users. In fact, you may find that your retouching techniques change dramatically (read "get much easier") thanks to Content Aware Fill.

There's no one "Content Aware Fill" tool. Rather, it's a new technology you can apply through the Spot Healing Brush or Photoshop's well-worn Fill command. The Content Aware Fill algorithm tries (and usually succeeds) at filling an area with "correct" texture, meaning it looks like the content in that particular area is supposed to look (Figure 1). Note: Click on any figure to see a larger, higher-resolution version of the image.

Figure 1. I can easily remove this sign using Content Aware Fill. First, I select it with the Lasso, then I choose Edit > Fill (or hit Shift-F5) and tell the Fill dialog box to use Content Aware Fill. The results are every bit as good as I could do with the Rubber Stamp tool, but much easier to achieve.

http://www.creativepro.com/files/story_images/20100512_fg01a.png

If you regularly remove elements from an image with the Rubber Stamp, Healing Brush, or Patch tools, you may be able to replace all of those features with Content Aware Fill. Not only is it easier, but the results are much faster.

Next in line for "most useful" is a modification to Photoshop's Refine Edge command. Because all sorts of effects and adjustments require good masks, mask creation is one of the most important operations in Photoshop. It's also one of the most difficult.

One of the big problems with selections in Photoshop has always been that a selection's edge was uniform all the way around. You could feather the selection to create a smooth transition around the selected area, but many subjects -- especially people -- aren't uniformly hard around the edges. Typically, you need hard edges around skin and clothing, and soft edges around hair and fuzzy clothes. CS5 solves this problem with the a few additions to the Refine Edges dialog box, which Adobe added in CS4 to ease mask creation.

After making a selection using any of Photoshop's normal selection tools, you can invoke the Refine Edge dialog box to smooth, feather, and soften the edge. New to CS5, you can now grab a new Refine Radius tool and paint over the edges of the selection you want to improve. As you paint, Photoshop analyzes the underlying image and modifies that part of the selection. The resulting selection will have a combination of hard and soft edges (Figure 2). For hair, fuzzy textures bits, transparency, and other tough to select areas, this is a great tool.

http://www.creativepro.com/files/story_images/20100512_fg02a.png

Figure 2. Notice how, after brushing along the edge of the hair, Refine Edge has created a non-uniform edge that will make for a cleaner composite.


Adobe pulled the Extract tool after Photoshop CS3, leaving the program without a built-in mask cutting tool. The new Refine Edge features are much better than the old Extract feature and compete well with third-party masking tools, such OnOne's MaskPro.

Puppet Warp
Photoshop has long had decent distortion tools, but while the Liquify tool is powerful, it's a little too freeform for some types of distortions. The new Puppet Warp tool lets you add a virtual skeleton to something in your image and then move the bones of the skeleton.

When you activate Puppet Warp, the current layer is mapped onto an editable mesh. You add pins to this mesh, then drag the pins to distort the mesh. As it distorts, your image is pulled along with it.

Puppet Warp's distortions happen in a mostly predictable, controllable manner. However, anything you want to warp must be isolated on its own layer. Happily, Content Aware Fill makes this process much easier than it used to be. For example, say I want to warp the horn of the water buffalo in Figure 3:

http://www.creativepro.com/files/story_images/20100512_fg03a.png

Figure 3. To warp this buffalo's left horn, I first select it using the Quick Selection tool, then cut it so I can paste the horn into its own layer. The problem is that after cutting, I have a big empty white space.


I could select the horn with the Quick Select tool, but then warping would warp the entire animal. Instead, I cut the selection and paste it into its own layer. This leaves an empty hole in the image, but a single Content Aware Fill command mostly solves the problem (Figure 4).

http://www.creativepro.com/files/story_images/20100512_fg04a.png

Figure 4. A Content-Aware Fill command makes short work of the hole in the image. It's not perfect, but a little Rubber Stamping will fix it.


Now I can distort the horn using Puppet Warp without revealing an empty background (Figure 5).

http://www.creativepro.com/files/story_images/20100512_fg05a.png

Figure 5. After sticking pins in the horn, I can easily bend and reshape it .


Adobe's added some very smart options to Puppet Warp. As you cross warped segments over each other, you can specify different layers of depth, so that warped parts properly fall in front of or behind other sections. You can also change the tool so that sections change size as you move points, allowing you to create bulging and flexing effects.

If you have experience with 3D modeling software, it's important to note that Puppet Warp is not an inverse kinematic system. There's no parent/child hierarchy, so you might find yourself a little confused when you first use the feature. Pushing one point won't necessarily move the attached points in the way you're used to.

For art directors and other people who need to modify images to fit specific needs, Puppet Warp will be a great tool. Photographers might even find the occasional use for it, if they need to make precise geometric adjustments.

Camera Raw 6
Adobe made a number of important changes to Camera Raw, including some things Photoshop has needed for a while. At first glance you won't see anything different about the Camera Raw dialog box, but digging into the Detail tab reveals some new noise reduction controls. While previous versions simply had sliders for reducing luminance and chrominance noise, Camera Raw 6 adds Luminance Detail, Luminance Contrast, and Color Detail sliders to help you balance noise reduction and detail loss.

But while these sliders may look innocuous, Adobe has crammed very sophisticated noise-reduction technology into Camera Raw 6. Previous noise-reduction features felt more like token additions, but the new features are serious tools that rival the best third-party noise reduction add-ons.

Camera Raw 6's noise reduction is so good that it may open up more ISO options on your camera. Higher settings that were previously too noisy might prove usable when you process them with Camera Raw 6's noise reduction (Figure 6).

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Figure 6. Camera Raw 6's new noise reduction is top-notch. In this before/after comparison, you can see the effects of both luminance and color noise reduction.


Camera Raw's Effects tab now has two major new features. First, a Grain simulator does a very good job of creating the look of real film grain. Whether you want to create an "old film look" or match a composited digital element with a piece of film, the Grain simulator offers good control and results.

Second, Adobe has reworked Post-Crop Vignetting. It no longer simply darkens corners, but gives you a few methods for adding a vignette. You can choose whether highlights or colors should get priority when applying the vignette effect. When using highlight priority for vignetting, you can also alter the brightness of the highlights, allowing you to create bright specular highlights that shine through the darkened areas. These controls provide a far more realistic simulation of how a vignette actually happens.

Camera Raw 6's superior noise reduction is the result of Adobe's re-writing of many core routines in Camera Raw. In addition to the improved noise removal, this new engine produces better overall image quality, including sharpness and color detail that can be superior to previous versions.

For many users, "Photoshop" means "Camera Raw," since they rarely go beyond the Camera Raw dialog box. In CS5, Adobe has served those users well.


(C) Adobe 2012 All rights reserved

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