Everybody’s a critic! That’s especially true when you’re using Photoshop in a work environment — or in any scenario that involves anything but 100 percent freedom to perform your Photoshop magic as you want. Sometimes, you’ll want to collect comments from your colleagues, approvals from your supervisors, ideas from your friends, or nit-picks from your clients. Photoshop lets everyone have his or her say by using annotations, notes, or audio comments.
You can use these clever feedback tools without worrying about physically modifying the work that you’ve carefully done. Imagine sticky notes you can move around your screen, and you’ll see what Photoshop’s Annotations feature can do for you. Text documents often are distributed for approval in a Portable Document Format (PDF) format by using Adobe Acrobat Reader, and comments are added by using the full Acrobat application.
Photoshop is compatible with Acrobat, too, so you can save your Photoshop files in the PDF format. For more detailed information on the PDF format, see Adobe Acrobat 6 PDF Bible, by Ted Padova (published by Wiley Publishing, Inc.).
You can use these clever feedback tools without worrying about physically modifying the work that you’ve carefully done. Imagine sticky notes you can move around your screen, and you’ll see what Photoshop’s Annotations feature can do for you. Text documents often are distributed for approval in a Portable Document Format (PDF) format by using Adobe Acrobat Reader, and comments are added by using the full Acrobat application.
Photoshop is compatible with Acrobat, too, so you can save your Photoshop files in the PDF format. For more detailed information on the PDF format, see Adobe Acrobat 6 PDF Bible, by Ted Padova (published by Wiley Publishing, Inc.).
Applying Annotations and Notes in Photoshop
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