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The Best Of Photoshop



When you’re putting together a design project, or editing photographs, your default program is usually Photoshop; however, if you haven’t paid up to buy the software, you can find yourself limited in terms of what you can achieve. For those that do want to regularly edit photographs and create professional looking displays, it’s worth looking towards bespoke design services for major projects, as well as to alternating photo editing programs that can be found on and offline for free.What are some of these alternatives, and what do they provide in terms of editing options?



 

GIMP

Despite its somewhat unfortunate name, GIMP (or GNU Image Manipulation Program), is one of the more comprehensive, and free, alternatives to Photoshop; you can access many Photoshop-like features, from masking to layering and plug-ins. The interface for GIMP is also relatively easy to use.

Inkscape

This program is mainly distinguished by offering vector support over bitmaps, meaning that it can enable more sophisticated editing than many other programs. Inkscape is also worth investigating for its flexibility, with the program available on different operating systems.

Pixia

Unfortunately only available for Windows at the moment, Pixia has been popular as an image editing program in Japan for some time; its interface is basic but accessible, and the program works particularly well if you want to combine design work with a stylus and digitization.

Splashup

A web based program, Splashup is open source and focused on providing pixel control and a lot of different options for depth changes – the interface is suitable for beginners, making Splashup a decent choice if you want to edit photos online.

Picasa

A basic Google product that can be easily downloaded or found with operating systems, Picasa won’t give you the depth of features that you get with Photoshop, but can still be used to correct photographs, and to catalogue different shots.

Seashore

For Macs only, this program is open source and mainly designed for use with OS X Cocoa – Seashore can handle text editing and different layers, as well as alpha channels, and is similar to GIMP in terms of its native file formats; this means that you can use both in conjunction with each other.

Photoplus

Mostly a photo enhancing program, Photoplus is only available for Windows, and should be viewed as a simple, but effective tool for fixing up any images that you have on your computer.

Mac Preview

Free with Mac devices, Mac Preview actually has a lot more to it than is first apparent – while the program is mostly used for opening images and PDFs, you can do a surprising amount with filters and image editing once you get into the program.

Paint.Net

A modified version of the old Windows favourite MS Paint, Paint.Net is open source, and designed to feature many Photoshop-lite features, from filters to text editing and masking.

Adobe Photoshop Express

If you really can’t bear to give up on Photoshop, Adobe do provide a basic browser based version of the program, with files hosted on cloud servers; you get a lot of the most essential Photoshop tools, making it best for simple editing and beginners who are intimidated by the sheer scale of options available for the main version.

The Biggest Names Behind Photoshop






Nowadays it’s impossible to find a professional website and even physical prints that is not digitally processed by Photoshop. In fact, almost every product or design today, including Hongkiat.com, has gotten help from Photoshop. More than 20 years on, it is still defining the universe of digital imaging, with no signs of slowing down.



Yet we know so few about who is behind it – key developers, whose names sit in front of the Photoshop splash screen we stare at every single time we launch the software. 





#1. Thomas Knoll

Photoshop, a mega software that shaped the world of digital imaging today, started from one person, Thomas Knoll. Knoll started Photoshop as a hobby to create code that displays grayscale image, and the initial success led him to create more image editing codes, which eventually became primal features of the now legendary Photoshop.

 (Image Source: YouTube)

His humility is legendary too. When he was inducted by NAPP (National Association of Photoshop Professionals), he responded with ‘Why would you want to induct me? I didn’t do anything special. Writing Photoshop was just something we did for fun back then.’ It is this attitude that culminates the selfless spirit of the Photoshop team, thus shaping a product built on awesome teamwork.

Thomas is still active in the Photoshop team until now, which is a rare path for most co-founders. He led the team until CS4, and his most recent work (at the time of this writing) is the Adobe Camera Raw plugin that processes raw image formats from digital cameras. His passion for Photoshop and digital imaging is unmatchable to this day.





#2. John Knoll

Although the name doesn’t appear in most versions of Photoshop’s splash screen except 1.0.7 and 2.0.1, John Knoll is another co-founder of the Photoshop. In fact he was the one who persuaded Thomas Knoll to turn his personal program into a commercial image editing software.

(Image Source: YouTube)

At the time, John Knoll was surprised at how similar Thomas’s program was to image processing software that charges $300/hour for basic photo retouching. He saw a future in affordable image editing software, and started to push Thomas to develop more features in spite of him still trying to finish his PHD study.

While working with Industrial Light and Magic, the company which develops visual effects for George Lucas’ motion picture company, John also created some image-processing routines, which later evolved into filters (lens flare!).




#3. Russell Preston Brown

No complex product can soar without the escort of the passionate evangelist, and for Photoshop, it’s Russell Preston Brown. Same with the Knoll brothers, Russell is one of the pioneers of Photoshop. On the Photoshop 1.0.7 splash screen only 4 names were listed at the time: Thomas Knoll, John Knoll, Steve Guttman, Russell Brown.

(Image Source: YouTube)

As Adobe’s Senior Creative Director, Russell Brown is the most devoted user of Photoshop, and he even evangelized the software with his mastery of design and Photoshop skills. He has been restlessly showcasing Photoshop’s potential in grand events like the Mac Summit, and offering his own tips and tutorials in his website. If you have ever seen his showcase, you could probably sense his passion (and a bit of insanity!) for Photoshop.




#4. Seetharaman Narayanan

Although he could probably retire and enjoy his life on certain tropical island, Seetharaman Narayanan chose to continue his work in Adobe. His name appears after the No.1 Thomas Knoll in the splash screen, so I’m sure you stared at his name a lot, particularly when your Photoshop is launching slowly.

(Image Source: PhotoshopNews)

And he truly deserves the honor, as Seetharaman Narayanan is the man that dedicated his best to make the Windows version of Photoshop possible, then made it multi-threadable. Now the Lead Adobe Photoshop Engineer, he also ported Adobe Lightroom to Windows. He doesn’t claim all the spotlight though but the benefit of having long names is that it is simply too unique to be ignored.





#7. Maria Yap

Maria Yap trained as a professional, and started her photography and design study before the birth of Photoshop, thus she truly appreciates the amount of hectic work that is saved through the aid of Photoshop. After several years of cruel industrial training (aka freelancing), Maria finally joined the Adobe team offering her expertise.

(Image Source: Adobe Featured Blogs)

She now leads a team of product managers and evangelists to develop innovative applications for design, such as Adobe Revel. Maria volunteers herself as a judge for the Adobe Youth Voices Aspire Awards, and part of the reason could be the immense inspiration that radiate from the event. It is apparent that her life is all about Photoshop, design and family.





#9. Bryan O’Neil Hughes

One requires courage and determination (and bit of luck!) to succeed in life, and Bryan O’Neil Hughes lived up the quote by joining the Photoshop team in 1999. Making his debut as a Quality Engineer, Bryan contributed by doing his best to destroy Photoshop internally with intensive testing. Besides, if you have tasted the juiciness of Liquify feature before, that also came from Bryan.

(Image Source: YouTube)

Bryan cares about users. During Photoshop’s 20th anniversary he did a survey with both Photoshop users and NAPP members to discover specific new features, or current user interface issues that were bugging them. Based on the data, they improved Photoshop CS5 and make it dominate the world of digital imaging again



Reflection

In my search for information, the most common word I caught in the interviews was ‘teamwork’. And what’s even more amusing is, most of the time the interviewee pushes the credit to someone else in the team! I believe it’s that humble nature and cooperative spirit that keeps both Photoshop and its innovation going for more than 20 years and probably a lot more in the future.

Also if you’re reading this article, there’s a great chance that you’re a Photoshop addict like me! What would you like to say to these Photoshop pioneers and engineers? For me, a simple thank you is probably not enough! Let us know your words then, and tell us how Photoshop transformed your life!

Design A Web 2.0 Tab With Photoshop

The follow guide below attempts to give you an idea how to design a nice sleek tab menu in Photoshop, Web 2.0 style.





Step 1

Create a new canvas with white[#ffffff] background at any size you like, preferably rectangular; they are more suitable to draw tabs. Then switch to Channels Tab (Windows -> Channels), click Create new channel on bottom right.



Step 2

On the channel layer selected, draw similar shape with Polygonal Lasso tool. Fill it up with white color[#ffffff]; unselect the Polygonal region (select any Marquee tool and hit the screen one); give the shape Gaussian Blur with radius 6.0px.



Step 3

CTRL-L to call up the Level Dialog and push the left and right arrow to meet the center arrow, like the image above. This will “smooth” your blur-ed shape up and give you a nice rounded corner shape.



Step 4
In Channels Tab, Hold CTRL, click on Channel Thumbnail of layer Alpha 1. The new shape will now be selected, switch back to Layers Tab, Create New Layer and fill the selected area with black [#000000].



Step 5
Remove rounded corners for bot bottom left and bottom right, move it towards the left and position it as illustrated above. Next we will focus on the black color Tab.


Hold CTRL, click on tab’s Layer Thumbnail to get the entire tab image highlighted.

With the tab image still highlighted, select Rectangular Marquee Tool, hold ALT and draw a rectangular of region we want to remove.

You should only see the top part selected. Select -> Modify ->Contract, Contract by 2px and you should get something like the image on the left.

Create a new layer, fill the highlighted region with white[#ffffff]. Right click, choose Blending Options then Gradiant Overlay. Replace the white[#ffffff] color stop with gray[#616161]. Your tab should look like the image on the left.



Step 6

Create a new layer; Select Rounded rectangular Tool (Radius 8px), draw a rectangular and put this layer behind the black tab layer. Right click and select Blending Options and insert the following settings.

Drop Shadow
Opacity: 31%
Distance: 0px
Spread: 0%
Size: 2px

Bevel and Emboss
Depth: 100%
Size: 0px
Soften: 0px

Gradiant Overlay
Here are the Color stops settings.
Color: #aaaaaa, Location: 0%
Color: #ffffff, Location 100%



Step 7

Put in some text to see the overall web 2.0 look. I’m using font Lucida Fax, font-size 32pt and 25pt. And your tab is done! Feel free to play around with the Tab’s colors combination.
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