Adobe’s Photoshop Creative Suite 2

Call It Photoshop 9 If You Must
OK, go on and say it: Stop the madness! You haven't even upgraded from Photoshop 7 or just started on CS and along comes Adobe's Photoshop CS2 a.k.a. Space Monkey. As before, there are CS2 versions of all of Adobe's other graphic applications including InDesign, Illustrator, and GoLive. This is also the last release in which Adobe plans to ship ImageReady as a stand-alone application; they will be integrating ImageReady's features into Photoshop, which makes so much sense you wonder why it took them so long to think of it.

All of the following comments are based on working with a late beta, but by no means final version of the latest Photoshop.

Bridge Over Troubled Pixels
Replacing Photoshop's File Browser is a stand-alone program, called Bridge, that's an automation and file management hub for the entire Creative Suite. Bridge frees up Photoshop for processing images while you work in Bridge and vice versa. Getting to it is as simple as clicking a button in the Options bar that kinda, sorta looks like the old File Browser icon. Because Bridge supports Illustrator, InDesign, and GoLive, it lets Photoshop users leverage those applications by, for example, creating a contact sheet in InDesign that's more editable than what's possible using Photoshop's Contact Sheet II or creating a richer Web Photo Gallery using GoLive as easily as Photoshop. If you already know how to use File Browser, you've got a head start on Bridge.

The splash screen may say "Space Monkey" but its official name is Adobe Photoshop CS2.

Accessed via Bridge, Adobe's new Camera Raw lets you simultaneously edit the settings for multiple raw files, then open the files in Photoshop or save them directly as DNG, TIFF, PSD, or JPEG. Files are processed in their own thread, making it possible to edit other files while conversion occurs in the background. Under the Adjust tab, you'll find "Auto" check boxes that position the Exposure, Shadows, Brightness, and Contrast sliders based on the image's actual data rather than camera defaults as before. You can crop images and place multiple color pickers. I never used File Browser's Rating System that is continued and improved with Bridge, but you can also rate images inside Camera Raw. Oh yeah, you can apply camera profiles directly in camera raw instead of waiting until the file is opened in Photoshop.

Adobe Systems' graphic applications are further strengthened by replacing Photoshop's File Browser with a stand-alone program called Bridge that's a hub for automation and file management across the entire Creative Suite 2.

For Digital Perfectionists
Photoshop CS2 supports HDR (High Dynamic Range) images. Most image files (you can call `em "Low Dynamic Range" if you want) have a dynamic range of around 100:1, which is similar to what you see on a print or computer display. HDR files typically have a range of 100,000:1 and their values are proportional to the amount of light corresponding to that pixel, unlike most image files whose pixel values are nonlinearly encoded. Working with HDR images is similar to camera raw files and applying exposure changes after the fact. Much as Adobe's support for 16-bit files was originally limited to basic operations, support for HDR files will also be initially limited.

Merge to HDR (File->Automate) takes multiple 8- or 16-bit images and converts them into a single HDR (32-bit) image for blending, followed by converting back into 8- or 16-bit mode. For Merge to HDR to work properly, source images must have been captured using different exposures. Cheating by saving multiple versions of a single raw file and using Merge to HDR won't work.

(Top) Accessed via Bridge, Adobe's Camera Raw lets you simultaneously edit the settings for "multiple" raw files then open the files in Photoshop or save them directly. Camera Raw can save one or more selected files as DNG, TIFF, PSD, or JPEG.
(Above) Adobe Photoshop's Filter Gallery (Filter>Filter Gallery) just gets better with every new version. In addition to an improved and larger interface in CS2, a New Effect layer command in this version makes it even easier to sandwich effects to images such as this portrait of model Jamie Lynn Larsen.

Filters And Plug-Ins
Many of my favorite Photoshop compatible plug-ins, including those aimed at noise reduction and sharpening, may have their places in my Filter's menu usurped by Photoshop CS2's new and built-in filters that accomplish many of these same tricks. Adobe Photoshop's Filter Gallery (Filter>Filter Gallery) just gets better with every new version. In addition to an improved and larger interface, a New Effect layer command in this version makes it even easier to sandwich effects.

The Vanishing Point filter (Filter>Vanishing Point) lets you define perspective planes on images, then clone, paint, and transform images according to that perspective. Adobe says that "this is a tool that's far better experienced than described," but I haven't figured it out yet. Maybe it's a beta thing.

The Vanishing Point filter (Filter>Vanishing Point) lets you define perspective planes on images, then clone, paint, and transform images according to that perspective. Adobe says that "this really is a tool that's far better experienced than described," but I haven't figured how to use it yet.

Photoshop CS2's Lens Correction filter (Filter>Distort>Lens Correction) will displace several third-party plug-ins in my collection, starting with ones that remove distortion and chromatic aberration. Not only that, there are controls for vignetting (add or subtract) and transformation to fix those "falling over" building architectural shots. Adobe even includes a wonderful grid overlay to keep lines straight.

Photoshop's new noise reduction command (Filter>Noise>Reduce Noise) features advanced controls for addressing noise found in individual channels while preserving edge detail. It should also be useful for removing JPEG artifacts.

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