By joguarts on
Jul. 10, 2007
Dear Friends.
I am interest in staring a new business with t-shirts, as my title says i will like to know how to manage PhotoShop. They told me that PhotoShop is one of the easiest programs to work with, i was trying to undersand it all night yesterday and i didn't learn anything at all. I will like to know if i can fine a website to support me.
Thanks,
JoGu Arts.
Re: I Want To Learn How To Work PhotoShop
JoguArts,
You could buy the Adobe Photoshop 'Classroom in a Book' from Amazon. It will take you lesson by lesson through Photoshop. The book comes with a CD ROM with lessons on it that you download onto your PC and complete in conjunction with the book. You need a certain amount of discipline to stick to the training but if you do, at the end you will be very competent in Photoshop. I was personally very impressed with this whole training package. There is now a 'Classroom in a Book' for CS3. This is a very inexpensive way to get excellent basic training.
Photoshop is huge, it's not something you can know in depth overnight. You could easily do a years full time college course in it, but for your purposes you will learn what you need and more from these set lessons and then you can experiment for yourself. You will then very quickly identify what you need and what you can ignore.
You'll also find a lot of free basic training in Photoshop itself under 'Help'.
Bruce.
Re: I Want To Learn How To Work PhotoShop®
What version of Photoshop® do you own? Go to Help > About Photoshop to get the version number.
I happen to HAVE a copy of "Photoshop® CS Classroom" in a Book for sale.
Contact me at [EMAIL=jr_sanford@yahoo.com]jr_sanford@yahoo.com[/EMAIL] if you are interested in it. Mine is "like new".
Or, go here www.half.com to search for more.
(That hyperlink will take you right to the Photoshop® CS Classroom page.)
If you're really interested in doing some spectacular artistic effects, then you may want to try Adobe's Illustrator® CS3. It uses "vector" art (curvy lines instead of pixelated) and produces text in it's crispest form.
J.R.
Cast aside your limitations;
And you shall be boundless!