8 Things to Remember when You Set Up Your Photoshop Preferences for Print Design / Production

Set Up Your Photoshop Preferences for Print Design/Production Designers depend on their Preferences settings to ensure a stable, trouble-free work environment. Using the Preferences dialog box in CS3, set the preferences that matter most to your print design/production workflow.

1. Access the Preferences dialog under the Photoshop menu (Mac) or the Edit menu (Windows). Scroll through the panels by clicking the Next and Prev buttons, or by pressing F/Ctrl+1 for the first screen, F/Ctrl+2 for the second screen, and so on all the way up to F/Ctrl+9. Use what you learned in this chapter to set the preferences that work best for your system and your design/production workflow.

2. Create and Save a Print Design/Production Workspace Photoshop allows you to save your workspace environment so that you don’t have to spend time repositioning palettes on the screen every time you launch the application. You can create and save a custom workspace for every type of image-editing work you do.

3. Arrange your palettes onscreen so that they take up the least amount of room possible. Try regrouping them, stacking them, and placing them in either side well. Make sure the most commonly used palettes are easily accessible. When your screen is set up the way you like, save the workspace. Create and save a workspace for every type of editing work you do in Photoshop.

4. Customize Menus and Keyboard Shortcuts Photoshop CS3 allows you to hide and show menu commands and customize keyboard shortcuts. Being able to customize your workspace like this ensures that you’ll always be working in a comfortable, uncluttered environment.

5. Try customizing the interface to display only the menu commands that you—a print designer—will really use. While you’re at it, modify the keyboard shortcuts to make them easier for you to remember.

6. Choose the Proper Color Settings for a Print Production Workflow Photoshop contains enhanced color management features that can make screen colors come as close as possible to what you’ll see in the final printed piece. Color management is intended  to ensure that the colors you are viewing onscreen are displaying—as accurately as possible—a true representation of what your photos will look like upon final output.

7. Save Images at the Proper Print Resolution Image resolution is determined by the number of pixels per inch (ppi for short) that an image contains. This is the measurement that tells us what each image’s print size and quality will be upon output. To ensure that the images used in your design will print well, you need to first check the current resolution and document size before placing the image in your layout and printing from an application such as InDesign or QuarkXPress.

8. Using what you have learned in this chapter, reduce the dimensions of a highresolution image (220ppi or higher) without reducing its resolution or ultimately its print quality.
8 Things to Remember when You Set Up Your Photoshop Preferences for Print Design / Production 8 Things to Remember when You Set Up Your Photoshop Preferences for Print Design / Production Reviewed by Pepen2710 on 5:46:00 PM Rating: 5

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