By Donnie O'Quinn
Second Edition
Pages: 658
ISBN 10: 1-56592-565-3 |
ISBN 13: 9781565925656
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
(Average of 2 Customer Reviews)
This book is OUT OF PRINT.
Book descriptionThis concise reference richly details Photoshop 5's powerful new features and describes every tool, command, palette, and submenu, plus common uses and misuses of each. Whether toiling with images for the Web, video, or print, this book enables professionals and sophisticated beginners to focus creative energy on design, not on where to find a tool or the right combination of filters and effects.
Full Description
- An intensive study of Photoshop's new ability to handle and create color profiles, including real-world examples and troubleshooting techniques
- Information on color-correcting tools that include more cause-and-effect descriptions of image adjusting vs. the final on-screen or printed piece
- An updated techniques appendix that still contains nearly 200 step-by-step items
Register your book | Submit Errata
Browse within this book
Cover | Table of Contents | Index | Sample Chapter | Colophon
Book details
Second Edition:
ISBN: 1-56592-565-3
Pages: 658
Average Customer Reviews: ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
(Based on 2 Reviews)
Featured customer reviews
Photoshop in a Nutshell, 2nd Edition Review, August 12 2000
After buying Photoshop for the Web by O'Reilly i changed my mind and i decided to buy the Photoshop in a Nutshell, 2nd Edition and its very usefull at what i do in Photoshop 5 O'Reilly's books are the best that i came across!
Photoshop in a Nutshell, 2nd Edition Review, July 27 2000
After buying >£30 books on Photoshop and lots of other computer subjects I've changed my mind on all those padded monsters - you don't need them. This book is simply the best Photoshop book I've seen. Its so handy I keep it right on my desk and dip in and out when I getstuck - which is often. There's so much information here written in a tight style and small font which I love. If you're a beginner then it probably isn't the best choice and Donnie O'Quinn's short, sharp and to the point method of writing (typical of O'Reilly books) is great for the intermediate/expert who doesn't want the hand holding just the good stuff. They should do more of these 'Nutshell' books they are simply all you need after you have some experience of the product.
Photoshop in a Nutshell, 2nd Edition Review, September 21 1999
Submitted by Lena [Respond | View]
Well, all books I have from series of "A Desktop Quick Reference" are the most useful books Ive ever had as references. There you'll find compact and full answers for most part of questions which could appear while you work, even if you are professional.
Photoshop in a Nutshell, 2nd Edition Review, July 18 1999
Submitted by Malin [Respond | View]
And I don't even like Photoshop - this author is making me change over to it - when's the book on Illustrator due? ;-)
Super! (referring ot 1st edition - v.4.0)
Photoshop in a Nutshell, 2nd Edition Review, June 26 1998
Submitted by Jodie McGuinness [Respond | View]
Another fantastic book by O'Reilly! I would not have passed my access course in Graphic Design and Illustration without it!!
I eagerly await the Illustrator in a Nutshell with glasses in one hand and my mouse in the other!!
Media reviews
Note: These reviews are for the first edition of
Photoshop in a Nutshell.
"I have tried a stack of books on both Photoshop and Illustrator, fortunately via the university library. Most of these books either attempt to teach Photoshop or Illustrator from scratch or show you how to do really fancy things. Until now none of them really addressed my needs. The user manual and on line help is enough to get me started and I don't really need to do the fancy things.
"Recently, I acquired a copy of...Photoshop in a Nutshell -- A Desktop Quick Reference.... This book gives me exactly what I need. Specifically, it tells me: what a command does, how it does it, what all the icons mean, what the common mistakes in application of a command are possible alternate or better commands that will better accomplish what I meant to do. Furthermore it does this in a succinct style that is easy to read and understand. At $US19.95 you should seriously consider this book."
--Dave Rogers, posted to comp.graphics.app.photoshop
"In this life, few dare hope to master Adobe Photoshop (now in version 4.0), not because it's unduly difficult, but because it has so many tools. I'm hard pressed to name another application with a wider array of features. With Photoshop you can produce a seemingly infinite variety of results in preparing scanned images for printing and on-screen production, including color correction and separation, image recomposition and retouching, and numerous special effects. Still, despite Adobe's well-written and nicely illustrated User Guide and tutorial CD-ROM and a wealth of independent titles, there is room for one more. Photoshop in a Nutshell: A Desktop Quick Reference, written by Donnie O'Quinn and Matt LeClair and published by O'Reilly, is another in the series of Nutshell books for which O'Reilly is famous.
"While Quick Reference is too often a euphemism for rehashed vendor user guides or unsightly tomes disgorging menu-by-menu feature descriptions,
Photoshop in a Nutshell earns its 'Quick' for its superb organization. Each chapter covers a feature category, such as Selection Tools, Paint Tools, and File Menu. Each chapter starts by explaining why you would use a set of tools. Then comes a discussion of the relevant techniques. Finally, the chapter steps you through each specific tool or menu with a unique, helpful format.
"When discussing a specific tool, the authors provide a bulleted list of Common Uses, which are indexed to a full discussion at the back of the book. This separation of the general from the detailed satisfies those who want more but helps keep the chapter itself lean and uncluttered. Chapter 10, for example, covers the Image Menu and includes a succinct description of the Adjust Curves controls. The seven additional pages of coverage in the Common Uses appendix illustrate how and why to use Curves for adjusting image contrast and how to use Curves for correcting color casts, with useful techniques I'd never considered. These detailed appendix discussions are pure gold for beginning and intermediate users because they succinctly cover the critical tasks for the relevant group of tools. My only complaint is that the Common Uses section in each chapter doesn't include specific page numbers for the appropriate appendix, and the Common Uses appendix doesn't reference the appropriate chapter number.
"Another useful element is a bulleted list of Common Errors to avoid while using a feature. The writers clearly prove their Photoshop expertise here, providing savvy tips, tricks, and a list of potholes to avoid.
"Another big plus is a 120-page section discussing every filter and effect under Photoshop's Filter menu, from Color Pencil to Digimarc Copyright Protection. Most are illustrated, with solid explanations and tips on using a filter to achieve the results you want. It's the best catalog of Photoshop filters and effects I've seen.
"The publisher tops off the package with an uncluttered, classically pleasing layout, which is printed on recycled paper. Yet the heavy-duty, cloth-reinforced binding should see Photoshop in a Nutshell through years of use. And at $20, it's a relatively inexpensive accompaniment to the Adobe User Guide or other specialty texts on Photoshop. Hey, you can never know too much about Photoshop."
-Computer Currents, http://www.currents.net/magazine/national/1601/prev1601.html
