MAY 01, 2002
Adobe Photoshop 7.0
Image editing and paint application
by David Nagel
Page 4 of 5

The other major productivity enhancement is the new File Browser. Like the Brush palette, the File Browser is, by default, lodged in the Palette Wall at the top of the Photoshop interface, though it can be dragged out to function as a window.

[an error occurred while processing this directive] Unlike the built-in navigation services of whatever system you're on, the File Browser is not just for locating files on your drives. It includes a directory tree listing of folders and files on any of your drives (including removable media) and also provides scads of information about the file, including size, dimensions, color mode, file size and EXIF data from digital cameras. The File Browser can also be used to modify certain characteristics about an image without leaving Photoshop and without opening the image. This includes moving, sorting, ranking, batch renaming and rotating.

A note about rotation: When you rotate the image in the File Browser, Photoshop stores the information internally. However, the image is not actually rotated until it's opened in Photoshop.

The File Browser is a fantastic addition to Photoshop's workflow tools, particularly if you have the screen real estate available to keep it open constantly. If not, it can be easily docked and opened when needed.

Image editing
There are three major new addition's to Photoshop's image editing capabilities, each of which make working on troubled images infinitely easier. The first is Auto Color, which appears in the Image menu along with Auto Levels and Auto Contrast. There are no options that go along with Auto Color. It's simply another tool for quickly correcting the color in images with unbalanced or undersaturated colors.

But Auto Color isn't the most sophisticated of the new Photoshop image editing features. By far the most important is the new Healing Brush. At first glance, it seems to operate just like the Clone Stamp tool. But clearly the Healing Brush goes far beyond this in its ability to clean up artifacts, dust and scratches and the like. Instead of just stamping one portion of an image over another, it actually samples certain attributes of one portion of the image and applies them to the area that needs fixing.



Take a look at the movie below sowing the Healing Brush in action.





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