SAMS Teach Yourself Adobe® Photoshop® CS2 in 24 Hours [Electronic resources] نسخه متنی

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SAMS Teach Yourself Adobe® Photoshop® CS2 in 24 Hours [Electronic resources] - نسخه متنی

Carla Rose, Kate Binder

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Hour 17. Adding Type to Pictures


What You'll Learn in This Hour:


If a picture's worth a thousand words, how many more is it worth if you add words to the picture? Well, never mind… The fact is, though, sometimes you have to add type to a picture for one reason or another. Long ago, Photoshop was infamous for its type handling, but the type problems have been long since solved. Now, you can add type directly onto a page, edit it, and control its leading, tracking, and kerning. You can set type vertically as well as horizontally, and you can warp it onto a predetermined path. You can set text either by clicking a start point on the page, or by dragging the Type tool to create a bounding box and then filling the box with type. You can even set type on a path, just like in Illustrator. There are almost too many cool type features to cover in a single hour. But, let's start with the basics.

A few things haven't changed. Photoshop still places your type on a separate type layer. Type must still be

rasterized before you can apply filters. You can apply gradient fills and layer styles such as drop shadows, bevels, and embossing, either before or after type is rasterized.


Types of Type


At this point, a few words about type might prove helpful. You'll be dealing with two kinds of type: outline type and bitmapped type. Outline type, which is also called vector type, consists of mathematically defined shapes, in either PostScript or TrueType language. Outline type can be scaled to any size without losing its sharp, smooth edges. Bitmapped type is composed of individual pixels. The sharpness of bitmap type depends on the type size and the resolution of the image. If you scale bitmapped type to a larger size, you'll see jagged edges, or

jaggies .

When you enter type on the screen in Photoshop, the letters are drawn as vector type. That's why you can edit them, reshape them, and play with them as much as you like. Anything you do just changes the numbers, and computers are very good with numbers. However, Photoshop is a bitmap program. It manipulates pixels, not vectors. To make the type part of the picture, it must be converted from vectors to pixels, or

rasterized .

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