Customizing your workspace in Photoshop is essential so that you can work as efficiently and as comfortably as possible. All of these palette locations can be moved and changed around or deleted as the case maybe. Let me give you an example. On the path tab here, I don’t use path that much so you just click on it, hold the mouse down, drag it away and exit out. Let’s say that I want to move a tab, move it to another set; hold it down, move it up to this set as you can see a black box appears in the new set release and now I have my History palette up here. If I delete a palette that I find that I am using more than I thought I would, simply go to window, click on it and bring it back in. Once you have the sets and palettes set up the way you like them, your workspace exactly the way you want it, you can save that workspace by going to save workspace and you could also reset the workspace to the default Photoshop setting, reset palette locations. So now let me try my saved workspace and that’s how to customize your workspace in Photoshop.
Course: | Adobe Photoshop for Photographers (3rd Edition) |
Author: | Gavin Phillips |
SKU: | 33611 |
ISBN: | 1-932808-56-6 |
Release Date: | 2005-03-31 |
Duration: | 4 hrs / 76 lessons |
Work Files: |
Yes |
Captions: | No |
Compatibility: |
Vista/XP/2000, OS X, Linux QuickTime 7, Flash 8 |