![]() ![]() Interface and ease of useįor a program with such enormous power, sophistication and control, Photoshop has a remarkably clean and simple interface. In fairness to Adobe, it’s hard to see how much more can be added to Photoshop to make it genuinely better, but the pace of change is underwhelming nevertheless. The clever new Select Subject option arrived in January 2018, together with a slider to control decontamination around selection edges (whoop!), and before that in October 2018 Adobe introduced 360 editing tools, depth map support for HEIF files and smattering of other enhancements and improvements. The latest Octoupdate brought the new Content Aware Fill workspace, a redesigned homepage with access to recent files, training materials and Lightroom CC profiles, live previews of blend mode changes and not a whole lot else. Photoshop CC is typically updated a couple of times a year (it’s all part of your subscription, of course), but the number of updates directly relevant to photographers does seem to have slowed. The new Content Aware Fill workspace gives you much more control over removing unwanted objects from your pictures You can use non-destructive ‘adjustment layers’ to modify your image’s appearance without changing the underlying pixels (so it can be non-destructive in that sense), but you can also combine image layers to produce sophisticated montages built from two or more images and blended with layer masks and blend modes. ![]() Layers are the backbone of Photoshop’s capabilities. By using its system of layers intelligently you can backtrack if you need to, but only at the cost of massive image files in the proprietary PSD file format. Photoshop works directly on the pixels in your images, so it’s not a fully ‘non-destructive’ editor that lets you wind back your changes at any time. It’s pretty difficult to sum up every feature in Photoshop without writing a book about it, but it is possible to explain broadly how it works and some of its most interesting tools. You can use its Adaptive Wide Angle filter to correct distortion in architectural shots, for exampleĪdobe Creative Cloud All Apps subscription options: Otherwise, the Photography Plan will likely be sufficient for your needs.Photoshop excels at technical corrections and adjustments. ![]() If you’re a photographer who wants to edit your photos in Photoshop CC, then you’ll need to sign up for the Photoshop Plan. So, the main difference between the two plans is that the Photoshop Plan includes Photoshop CC while the Photography Plan does not. The Photoshop Plan includes Lightroom CC, Lightroom Classic CC, Photoshop CC, and 20 GB of cloud storage. The Photography Plan includes Lightroom CC and Lightroom Classic CC, as well as 20 GB of cloud storage. So what’s the difference between the two plans? Both plans give users access to Adobe Creative Cloud, which allows users to sync their files across devices and share them with others.īoth plans also include Adobe Lightroom CC, which is a cloud-based photo editing application. ![]() Adobe offers two different plans for photographers who want to edit their photos: the Photography Plan and the Photoshop Plan. ![]()
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