- THE TRICK TO TRICKY
- LIVE PATCHING PREVIEW
- ZOOMING ALL YOUR TILED IMAGES AT ONCE
- FINDING THE PHOTOGRAPHIC BRUSH TIPS
- HOW TO DUPLICATE A COLOR STOP
- REMOVING EDGE FRINGE WHEN COLLAGING
- CRACKING THE EASTER EGG MYSTERY
- SUPERCHARGE YOUR FILTER EFFECTS
- UNDO ON A SLIDER!
- GETTING TO THE FOLDER OF PHOTOS YOU WANTFAST!
- TWO FILES ARE BETTER THAN ONE
- RESIZING PATHS THE EASY WAY
- THE GAUSSIAN BLUR KEYBOARD SHORTCUT
- THE ADVANTAGE OF PHOTO FILTER ADJUSTMENT LAYERS
- WHERE TO SET CUSTOM VIEW SIZES
- MOVING YOUR IMAGE IN FULL SCREEN MODE
- DON'T RANK ITFLAG IT
- PHOTO-RETOUCHING SAFETY TIP
- PHOTOSHOP'S HIDDEN STEP AND REPEAT
- PAUSING FOR A BRUSH PREVIEW
- THE UNDOCUMENTED AIRBRUSH TOGGLE TRICK
- GIVE MOST ANYTHING A KEYBOARD SHORTCUT
- NO MORE UNLOCKING A BACKGROUND COPY
- SWAPPING CROP FIELDS
- LET THOSE WINDOWS BREATHE!
- THE MULTIPLE UNDO SHORTCUT
- WANT ARROWHEADS? PHOTOSHOP CAN ADD THEM FOR YOU!
- GETTING TO THE FREE TRANSFORM TOOL'S POP-UP LIST
- DRAGGING AND DROPPING WHERE YOU WANT
- CUSTOM BRUSHES DON'T HAVE TO BE SQUARE ANYMORE
- FEATHER A SELECTION WITHOUT THE GUESSING GAME
- CREATING A FLATTENED VERSION OF YOUR LAYERED IMAGE
- IF IT'S NOT SQUARE, YOU CAN STILL CROP IT
- TOP-SECRET PHOTOSHOP SPLASH SCREEN
- FALL IN LOVE WITH A TEMPORARY BRUSH, OR NOT
- UNDO A SAVE? THAT'S IMPOSSIBLE, ISN'T IT?
- MAKE A PHOTOSHOP CLIENT PRESENTATION
- CHANGE BRUSH SOFTNESS ON THE FLY
- LIGHTS, CAMERA, ACTION: SLIDE SHOWS USING PHOTOSHOP
- HOW TO CORRECT ONE PROBLEM COLOR
- BUILDING A BETTER BACKGROUND ERASER TOOL
- GETTING SIDE-BY-SIDE PREVIEWS
- CUSTOM BRUSHES: START WITH A CLEAN SLATE
- TIMING IS EVERYTHING!
- INSTANT THUMBNAIL SIZE CONTROL
- BRING UP YOUR LAST PREFERENCE
ZOOMING ALL YOUR TILED IMAGES AT ONCE
If you've chosen to tile your open windows (in the Window menu, under Arrange, choose Tile), in Photoshop CS you get some hidden functionality. If you want all the tiled images to be displayed at the same level of magnification, just hold the Shift key, grab the Zoom tool, zoom in on one of the images, and all the other tiled images will jump to that same magnification. This is great when you're trying to compare a number of similar images for detail.