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by: mr. bad_duda
Just as a carpenter, a mechanic or a surgeon each have tools that are specific to the type of work they do, so to does Photoshop. Photoshop is often times referred to as a tool used by photographers, image editors, graphic designers, web designers, and other creative professionals, but really, it's not so much a tool itself as it is a collection of tools. There's a tool for dragging out a selection, a tool for making selections based on similar color and tonal values, a tool for adding type to a document, a tool for cloning one part of an image onto another part of an image, a tool for "healing" an image (which usually means removing wrinkles and various skin blemishes), a tool for zooming in and out of the document, a tool for dragging the document around inside the document window, and more. There's even tools which are variations of other tools, like how the Elliptical Marquee Tool is a variation of the Rectangular Marquee Tool. They both perform essentially the same task, which is to drag out a selection. They just drag out a different selection shape. There's a tool for grabbing the color from one part of an image, a tool for painting colors onto an image, a tool for erasing parts of an image, and yes, even a tool for removing red-eye from a photo, although for some strange reason, it took Adobe nine versions of Photoshop before they added a red-eye removal tool to their flagship professional-level image editing program. Before we can use any of Photoshop's tools though, we first need to know where they are, and where they are is in the Tools palette (often referred to as the Tool Bar), which is the vertical bar full of what seems like miscellaneous icons located by default on the left side of the screen. Those icons represent the various tools Photoshop gives us to work with. If you look closely at the Tools palette, or at the screenshot on the left, you'll notice thin horizontal lines running across the palette. If you've read through the section of the website on the Menu Bar, you'll recognize these lines as being there for a reason. Even though it may appear at first that the Tools palette is merely a random assortment of icons, it's actually divided up into several groups, with each group containing similar types of tools. |