WHICH PHOTOSHOP
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2006-02-26
11:15 PM
- last edited on
2023-05-11
01:44 PM
by
Noemi Balogh
MY QUESTION IS - WHICH PHOTOSHOP SHOULD I USE AT THE END OF THE DAY? THERE ARE A HALF DOZEN OR SO TO CHOOSE FROM WITH VARYING DEGREES OF CAPABILITY.
I LIKE TO KNOCK UP A HIGH DEGREE OF PRESENTATION WORK, BUT THE INFO ON THE BACK OF THE BOXES DOES NOT GIVE ANYWHERE NEAR THE INDICATION OF WHAT EACH PARTICULAR VERSION CAN DO. AND WE ALL KNOW THAT ONLY AFTER A COUPLE OF YEARS OF WORKING WITH ANY S/W DO YOU BEGIN TO FULLY UNDERSTAND WHAT THAT PACKAGE CAN AND CANNOT DO.
THE PRICES RANGE FROM ABOUT $200 - $1,800
I DON'T MIND PAYING IF IT IS WORTH IT (IE ARCHICAD!), HOWEVER I DON'T WANT TO PURCHASE TOO HIGH END A VERSION IF HALF OF IT WILL NEVER BE USED.
DWIGHT, ANY CLUES? PS - I BOUGHT YOUR BOOK ON RENDERING IN AC!
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2006-03-27 01:29 AM
s2art wrote:actually no. 'elements' still has many of photoshop's powerful tools - more than enough for the average user and probably far more than granny would need.
I gather that Photoshop Elements is a very basic version, that wouldn't necessarily have enough tools to do the jobs required for architectural illustrations. Great for Granny putting her photo album of the grandkiddies together though.
i
~/archiben
b f [a t ] p l a n b a r c h i t e c t u r e [d o t] n z
archicad | sketchup! | coffeecup
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2006-03-27 02:34 AM
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2006-03-27 08:34 AM
It has very usable selection, layers etc... although it misses some of the more advanced parametric layer settings. But I also doubt that many fulltime architects will miss this much. I know I haven't noticed many of the limitations, apart from some of the text-tools. Text layers stay parametric, but the Layer Styles are based on presets and not on fully parametric editable settings.
Archicad28/Revit2024/Rhino8/Solibri/Zoom
MBP2023:14"M2MAX/Sequoia+Win11
Archicad-user since 1998
my Archicad Book

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2006-03-27 08:08 PM

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2006-03-27 10:07 PM
Karl

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2006-03-27 10:14 PM
to reduce overprinted blackness (K=knockout) by reducing the black ink component of the image, restoring luminosity to the other inks.
In my seminar, I show a facsimilie of that technique in the RGB mode for users of Photoshop Elements.
Considering the price and the new features revealed by reading the review, Elements looks pretty good for ArchiCAD users.

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2006-04-16 06:32 PM

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