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Adobe Photoshop CS3: Top 5 Standout New Features

Upon first digging into Adobe Photoshop CS3, a few features have really popped out at me as incredibly useful. I would like to offer a brief overview of some of these new ways of attacking your creative challenges using the latest version of Adobe's flagship app. PsCS3 will run you about $649 to buy it outright if you do not own any previous versions. If you own Photoshop 7, CS, or CS2, you are eligible for upgrade pricing - looks like $199 for the upgrade. Check Adobe's store on their website for more info. For more information about what comes in the different versions of CS3, and what your suite configuration options are, see my previous post.

My current favorite five new PsCS3 features in order are:

1. Nondestructive Smart Filters
2. Quick Selection Tool & Refine Edge
3. Photomerge with advanced alignment and blending
4. Automatic layer alignment and blending
5. Vanishing Point with adjustable angle

Feature Overviews:

Nondestructive Smart Filters

Adobe has finally given us non-linear, nondestructive filters. Can I just say "HOORAY!" In the past, you applied filters and effects in a linear order: one filter would alter your image, and the second filter would alter your now altered image, and a third filter would alter the altered altered image. The problem with that workflow is that if you decide you want to slightly tweak the second filter, you'd have to either undo back to that point (losing your subsequent edits), or use the history palette to step directly "back in time" to the point before you added the second filter, add your "revised" second filter and then add your third manually. All too often, you don't quite remember what exact parameters you had set on that third one - or worse, your real world project involved applying 20 filters instead of the 3 in my example and changing the second filter would mean redoing the 18 that follow it. What a drag. Because of this issue, people developed many work arounds (often involving saving off multiple "partially completed" versions of files all over your hard drive with iterative file names, hoping that if you needed to go back to a certain point in time you'd be able to figure out where you needed to be), and while these workarounds were clever and well-conceived in many cases, there was a perfect, real solution, waiting to happen.

The real solution to all this is what we have been given in CS3: Nondestructive Smart Filters. In this new version, each filter and effect that you apply to a layer, remains live and continually re-editable, in real time, and the parameters that you adjust will all cascade down through whatever subsequent filters or effects you might have added to your layer. These are savable, movable, copy and pastable, and most importantly scalable.

Quick Selection tool & Refine Edge

A design mentor of mine once told me "Photoshop is all about the selection. You select something, and then you do something with the selection. Nothing more, nothing less. Remember that, and you'll never go wrong using this app." Almost 10 years later, I must say she was absolutely correct. Using Photoshop is all about "the selection." There are more tools in Photoshop for selecting than for any other single task.

As in just about every version of Photoshop that has ever been released, CS3 has made even greater strides in the area of "making your selection" than comes to memory in recent years. The new Quick Selection Tool used in combination with the Refine Edge palette is about the most helpful and clean way of selecting the edges of an object in your image that I have ever seen. This new revised Quick Selection tool is so smooth. You basically set the parameters of your Quick Selection tool - as if it were a brush - and paint the general area of your image edges (like trying to select just a kid and his soccer ball out of the photo of the big game) and Photoshop is watching what you do, and interpreting what you consider to be the general edges of what you are wanting to select and it figures out what's kid and ball and what's grass and goal posts and sky and crowd and selects just what you want it to. It's VERY fast and clean. Then, you can invoke the Refine Edge palette, and you have seemingly infinite control over exactly how the edges of that selection behave. Check out the palette to the right to get an idea of what you could do to "refine" that edge. With radius, feathering, smoothing, and various display settings, I believe this new combo will cut down on my masking and selecting time in a quantifiable way.

Photomerge with advanced alignment and blending

Ever tried to stitch together a series of images that you took, that you intended to "put together" into a panorama? Even with some of the stand alone tools that have been available over the years—even those for doing quicktime VR's—are clunky and difficult to use - with mixed results at times. I have always wanted something built into Photoshop to let me do these "photo merges" - I never expected that Photoshop would actually be able to automatically do it for me. This feature floored me. The technologies involved in my number four choice "Automatic layer alignment and blending" are at work here in this feature as well, and the new auto layer alignment features in CS3 are far-reaching and crop up again and again in different areas of the application. It's really one of the revolutionary things about this new version.

All of the things that have made making panoramas a difficult task in the past are all done automatically. The primary among these being 1. those times when you have to actually distort, rotate, skew or transform one of your elements because the perspective is screwy, 2. those times when the sun or lighting or a window made the white balance, color space or over all wash of brightness and contrast different from one image to the next (especially when doing 360's) and of course 3. actually finding and aligning those overlapping areas of consecutive elements. Photoshop CS3 does these all for you and with surprisingly amazing results. It's not just about the typical "panorama" either... I saw a demo of someone standing "too close" to a building, and taking pictures zoomed all the way out, of the front door, windows and window-boxes, front brick walk way, tilting upward and taking a picture of the balcony and roof line of the second floor - in other words, many elements that were WAY out of whack in terms of perspective, lighting and color space, and these 4 or 5 images were distorted, tweaked, rotated, matched, blended, lighting and color density matched... and I was amazed in like 5 seconds, there was this "wide angle" almost "fisheye" photomerge of the front of the building, from brick walkway to roof-line, and it looked incredible.

Automatic layer alignment and blending

Another powerful application of this new alignment and blending technology is with a series or stack of images of the same subject. Let's say you wanted to take a picture of a statue in a park somewhere, or a huge fountain, or the front of a monument or building. There are always people walking through the frame - if you can't close down the area and still need a picture of the statue, in the park, in it's beautiful setting, but with no people or birds or random elements - what are you to do? In the past, it was a painstaking process of shooting a bunch of images, selecting the "closest" one to your vision of a nice, clean, tourist-less frame, and begin the hours and hours of painting, cloning, healing, brushing etc., to remove all of your "randoms." There are artists who are very good at this process, but I'm fairly certain they would agree that if there was a way to not have to spend all that time, they'd take it. Well, it's here. Photoshop CS3 can take your stack of images and by analyzing all of them, figure out which things are permanent (things that appear in all the images like that building in the distance, the big tree, the sidewalk, and which parts of the image are obscured in one of the frames but not all of them, are healed automatically by borrowing pixels from other images in the stack and building an advanced composite of all the images and doing 90% or more of the work for you. There's even a set of "fuzziness" sliders letting you say "eleminate things that are in X% of the images in the stack or less." This is so impressive to see in action. You have to try it on some of your own images. It's really hard to believe that it's this easy to do this sort of process now. This is one of those new areas that I'm sure we'll see artists finding incredibly creative ways to utilize this feature. Again, this one floored me when I first saw it.

Vanishing Point with adjustable angle

One of the most powerful new features of Adobe CS2 was the vanishing point feature. One limitation it had was that you only had one set of right angles to work with in the vanishing point interface. Adobe took it one exponential step further by adding multiple, adjustable angle perspective planes to this vanishing point feature. What this enables you to do is copy, paste and clone in far more complex image planes than just the "clone parts of a building in perspective" job that the first iteration of this feature offered (impressive and powerful, but not very flexible). One of the big examples Adobe is pushing with this feature is to simulate 3D packaging and work on multiple planes at various angles in the same image. Like an open box for a new product, or even for experimenting with your final package art by seeing it in its real-world context. Again I think this feature has so many far reaching implications for inventors, prototypers, 3D modelers, visual effects artists... and can give Photoshop artists the ability to render full blown mockups of product packaging art for clients in a whole new way - getting us to sign-off, green-light and on to the next project at hand much more quickly. I like that a lot.

There are numerous new features in the application, especially when you dig down deep into the Photoshop Extended editions (sounds like a Peter Jackson DVD...) and as the week progresses here, I'd like to look into some of what PsCS3 Extended has to offer. The versions of PsCS3 that are available are the Film & Video, Medical & Science, AEC (Architecture, Engineering & Construction), and Manufacturing editions.

Submitted by Todd Howard  March 27, 2007 - 5:03am
By pr0xy k1ll3r (not verified) on March 28, 2007 - 5:37am

Thanks for the quick but detail preview! :)

By Riley (not verified) on March 28, 2007 - 9:35am

These sound like great new features but one i really want is blur layer effects. what i mean is, if you wanna make a glass like effect to a layer which blurs the layers beneath it then you'd currently have to use blur brush to blur all the layers individually. Problem with this is if you decide you want to animate or move your glass layer your screwed.

By watch free tv online (not verified) on March 28, 2007 - 9:38am

Damn something happened, comment may not be working. Basically I wanted to say how another new feature of CS3 is dynamic lighting - so you can make 3 images with different lighting have the lighting angle all done digitally and dynamically, great for portraits.

By Benjamin Fox (not verified) on March 28, 2007 - 9:45am

Thanks for the great post, Todd. I'm especially excited about the Quick Selection tool. It looks like Adobe has started packing in the features that appeal to pros and amateurs alike. Can't wait to hear more on your opinion of this juggernaut as you use it in the future!

By MagicMonkey (not verified) on March 28, 2007 - 9:51am

Good Summary. Thanks for the overview.

By patrick moody (not verified) on March 28, 2007 - 9:54am

'I have always wanted something built into Photoshop to let me do these "photo merges" '

This as built into photshop for a while under file-> Automate -> Photomerge

I would recommend Autostitch at the moment as it blends the pics better(than CS2)

By David Kaspar (not verified) on March 28, 2007 - 3:16pm

RAW adjustments to all types of images (even JPGs).

By Smartboard (not verified) on March 28, 2007 - 6:52pm

Does anyone know what interoberability features are going to be added for photoshop/macromedia products. I'm hoping that some of these new features will be seamless and easily integrated into, Dreamweaver for example.

By chaoskaizer (not verified) on March 28, 2007 - 8:30pm

good review. i like the smart filter & Vanishing Point with adjustable angle. very neat

By olga (not verified) on March 28, 2007 - 11:07pm

Photoshop is so powerful program and that is great that they keep on improving it and adding more and more useful features. Although no breakthrough this time, but still these new features will be definitely of use. Also thank you for keeping us informed.

By Spencer Ferguson (not verified) on March 29, 2007 - 5:07am

Thanks for the preview! I can't wait to try out the new photomerge feature...

By Todd Howard (not verified) on March 29, 2007 - 3:25pm

I appreciate all the feedback guys. Thanks!!

@Riley: That sounds like a fantastic feature. It seems like there must be a way to achieve this in the new PsCS3 - even if it's not a touted feature... I'm going to work on that and get back to you on it... I'll post something here if I can figure out how to make this happen. Let me know if you figure it out as well...

@WFTV: Agreed - the dynamic lighting effects are awesome. Right, you can create multiple versions of the same image with different lightings, easily, and just the same you can create multiple (different) images with the same lighting (a la catalogue photography) to create a seemless collection of images all lit the same. I have to play around with this more, but it's a great feature to be sure.

@Benjamin: I plan to write a whole series of posts on Zoom In about the new CS3 products, and will be posting them here in the coming weeks.

@David: Since I do not own a camera that shoots RAW I have not played around with these features yet (nor in Aperture, sadly) - what can you tell us about how these RAW Adjustments work?

@Smartboard: One of the BIGGEST things Adobe is plugging with the new suite is Bridge and the interoperability between every single app in the lineup promises to be seemless and snag-free. Keep an eye on the site in the coming weeks for some exciting stuff with Dreamweaver... there will certainly be examples of how to integrate Photoshop into your Dreamweaver workflow - it's looking VERY powerful.

Thanks again to everyone for the comments, and the Diggs! This post hit 1400 diggs this morning which totally rocks.
CHEERS!
-Todd

By Matt Sandy (not verified) on April 2, 2007 - 7:21pm

Adobe already has a solution for panoramics called photomerge.

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