adobe photoshop cs

Photoshop Quick Tip 2– Action and Shape Sharing

For this Quick Tip, I’ve decided to explore a question asked in the MacMerc
Forums
:

pandamouth
writes:

Hi,
I want to load my custom actions and shapes onto a different computer. (OS X.3, photoshop CS)
Where are they stored?
Thanks!

To answer the question as it was asked, Photoshop CS Actions and Custom Shapes
are stored in you user Library folder under Preferences and in the Adobe Photoshop
CS Settings folder. You will see several files in this folder that hold your
Actions, Brushes, Custom Shapes and Gradients among other user customizable
settings. You will only see a Custom Shapes preference file if you have actually
created your own custom shape and added it to the Custom Shapes palette. If
you haven’t done that, then you really don’t have anything you need to transfer
over anyway. If you do see a file titled “CustomShapes.psp” or “Actions
Palette.psp”, you can copy those over to another computer into the Adobe
Photoshop CS Settings folder and your custom shapes and actions will have been
transferred.

Unless you have saved an entire set of totally custom shapes and are copying
them to a machine with no custom shapes, I do not recommend this method, because
you will obliterate any custom shapes that have been added to the preferences
of the computer to which you are copying. You will be covering over the computer’s
own set of custom shapes with the current collection that is active on the source
computer. I much prefer to save out my custom shapes and then append another
set with the custom shapes I’ve created as the need arises. This also allows
me to share my shapes with others online without having to send them every shape
I have. The same goes for Brushes, Swatches, Gradients, Styles, Patterns, Contours
or Tools presets.

Here’s how I save out my custom shapes:

Go to the Edit menu and choose “Preset Manager…” Now hit Command-7
to set Custom Shapes as your Preset type. Click on one of the custom shapes
you’d like to share and Command-Click on any more you’d like to accompany it.
Hit the “Save Set…” button to save your shapes in their own private
set. What you will have saved is a file that you can add to any other Photoshop
CS Custom Shapes collection by clicking “Load…” from the Preset
Manager and choosing the set you saved. The same steps will work to save out
Brushes, Swatches, Gradients, Styles, Patterns, Contours or Tools presets but
not Actions.

Here’s how I save out my actions:

Open the Actions palette. Actions are saved out in sets which are displayed
in the Actions palette as being contained inside a “folder”. All the
actions that you want bundled up and saved out in your set need to be enclosed
in a folder all to themselves. So, if that isn’t the case, create a new set
by either clicking the folder icon at the bottom of the Actions palette, or
by choosing “New Set…” from the Actions palette pullout menu. Name
your set and the drag the actions you want to save out into that set in the
Actions palette.

Once you have a set created that holds nothing but the actions you want to share,
select your new set by clicking the folder that encompasses it and click open
the Actions palette pullout menu and choose “Save Actions…” Name
the set and save it where you’ll know where to find it later (using the Photoshop
Actions folder in Photoshop’s Presets folder would be slick). Now when you want
to add that to another Photoshop CS install, just send the file over to the
other Mac, open the Actions palette pullout menu and choose “Load Actions…”
Find your set on the new machine and load away.

That’s it. If you have any ideas for Photoshop Quick Tips you’d like to see,
take a cue from pandamouth and post a question in the MacMerc
Forums
. Otherwise, you’ll just have to make do with whatever I decide to
teach you. ;D

Alien Skin releases Eye Candy Effects Collection–Universal update on the way

438217967 c3325fd090 m Alien Skin releases Eye Candy Effects Collection  Universal update on the wayAlien Skin Software today released the Eye Candy Effects Collection, a bundle of Eye Candy, Xenofex, and Snap Art plug-ins for Adobe Photoshop and other image editors. The Eye Candy Effects Collection includes 54 special effects filters with over 1000 one-click settings.
The Eye Candy Effects Collection includes full versions of five Alien Skin plug-in titles: Eye Candy 5: Impact, Eye Candy 5: Nature, Eye Candy 5: Textures, Xenofex 2, and Snap Art. These filters allow digital artists and graphic designers to create chrome, fire, smoke, lightning, clouds, comics and dozens of other effects with a single click.

438218003 1e72b9ee25 m Alien Skin releases Eye Candy Effects Collection  Universal update on the way border=0 width="240" height="240" alt="Alien Skin releases the Eye Candy Effects Collection. Universal updates coming soon." />Alien Skin will release Universal versions of all their plug-ins soon. All customers who purchase the Eye Candy Effects Collection will receive free updates when they become available. Purchased separately, these plug-ins are valued at USD$575. The Eye Candy Effects Collection sells for an estimated street price of USD$399. The Eye Candy Effects Collection sells online from Alien Skin and is also available worldwide through stores, catalogs and resellers.

The Eye Candy Effects Collection includes five plug-ins that must be used with one of the following image editors: Adobe Photoshop CS or later, Adobe Photoshop Elements 4 or later, or Corel Paint Shop Pro Photo XI or later. Eye Candy Effects Collection requires 512 MB RAM and 1024×768 or greater monitor resolution a G4 or G5 PowerPC processor and Mac OS X 10.3.9.
Note:

Alien Skin announces Snap Art. How does it compare to our Comic Art Effect?

315394206 017bde457d m Alien Skin announces Snap Art. How does it compare to our Comic Art Effect?Alien Skin Software today released Snap Art, an all new plug-in for Adobe Photoshop and other image editors. Snap Art quickly creates convincing, one-click natural effects with no laborious hand editing. Artists, photographers, and designers can now give a hand-crafted look to any digital image.

Snap Art introduces several effects never seen before in a plug-in. Convincing line drawings, both pen and pencil, are now possible in moments. These can be combined with shading and crosshatching for a more realistic image. Snap Art can also recreate an image with a comic book look, complete with shading and half-toning. How does it measure up to our own Comic Art Effect? Well, it i certainly faster, easier and offers all kinds of experimentation before you commit to the effect. And you don’t even really have to commit to the effect because Snap Art offers you the option to have the effect applied on a layer independent of the one you are affecting. But as far as how the results compare, see for yourself…

315379836 f54f321ae2 m Alien Skin announces Snap Art. How does it compare to our Comic Art Effect?
315379835 f93eaec962 m Alien Skin announces Snap Art. How does it compare to our Comic Art Effect?

I, for one, am suitably impressed. I admit I was unable to exactly duplicate our effect with Snap Art, but it brought the image closer to the goal in one step than our tutorial could in 5 pages of the 9 page tutorial. Pretty slick and it comes only three years after I suggested that Alien Skin make such a filter!

Snap Art also a wide variety of traditional effects. Digital artists can render a still life with pointillism as a Neo-impressionist might with more control than Photoshop’s built-in Pointalize filter. There are also dry brushed watercolor, thickly textured impasto, colored pencil, charcoal and oil pastel effects to chose from.

Snap Art sells for an estimated street price of USD$149. Registered users of other Alien Skin products can purchase Snap Art for USD$99 when ordering direct. Snap Art is a plug-in; it must be used with one of the following: Adobe Photoshop CS or later, Adobe Photoshop Elements 4 or later, it also requires 512 MB RAM and 1024×768 or greater monitor resolution and a G4 or G5 PowerPC processor and Mac OS X 10.3.9 (according to the press release… runs fine on Intel based Macs too).

Your comments are welcome in the Forums.
Note: