Book Review: Adobe Photoshop CS3 For Photographers by Martin Evening
Published July 25, 2007
I am going to be honest — this is the third copy of Martin Evening's book that I have owned. I first found it with the release of Adobe Photoshop CS and was awestruck by how useful this book was. When CS2 was released, I picked up that version and donated my copy of the CS version to a local library. Now it appears I will be doing that again.
Adobe Photoshop CS3 For Photographers is not a beginner's guide, although a sharp student may want to have it around because as they become more adept with their Photoshop skills, they will want to expand their techniques with the ones contained within the pages of this book. Rather, it is a reference book for all things Photoshop dealing with photographs. There is a reason the book is subtitled "A Professional Image Editor's Guide to the Creative Use of Photoshop for the Macintosh and PC."
Adobe Photoshop CS3 For Photographers is really a reference book for both advanced amateur and professional photographers. It is a listing of every conceivable technique that a photographer may need to implement in the pursuit of creating digital photographic images using Adobe Photoshop. It contains 15 chapters covering over 700 pages.
Chapters 1-3 are more of an introduction to the changes and new features that come with Adobe Photoshop CS3 as well as a guide to the physical layout of the Photoshop interface. Here the author goes into some basics of working with images, configuring Photoshop, and working with the basic components such as Adobe Bridge and working with plug-ins.
Chapter 4, "Basic Pixel Image Editing" introduces you to the basic Photoshop image adjustments. These are things that you will do to each image that you process and so it is important to understand these fundamentals. Chapter 5, "Camera Raw Image Processing" shows you the "second" method of processing images, the first being the ones you learned in chapter 4. By working with the new version of Camera Raw, you can process your JPEG and Tiff as well as your RAW images. Here the author explains the Camera Raw workflow.
Chapter 6, "Fine-tuned Image Corrections" now gets into specific corrections to images. Previously you have been working with global changes to an image, now you will correct things like color fixes, use of the healing brush, and blending using adjustment layers and layer masks. Chapter 7, "Image Retouching" covers the methods of image enhancement. Here you will learn the basic techniques of retouching images to clean up dust spots, red-eye, or remove blemishes as well as many other techniques.
Chapter 8, "Layers, Selections and Masking" explains the tools and strategies for shooting pictures with the idea of making composites images. This chapter also serves as an introduction to Layers, the feature in Photoshop that allows you to stack changes and images on top of each other for effects. Chapter 9, "Darkroom Effects", does just that, shows you how to duplicate traditional darkroom effects such as split color toning, black and white solarization, and color overlays.
- Book Review: Adobe Photoshop CS3 For Photographers by Martin Evening
- Published: July 25, 2007
- Type: Review
- Section: Books
- Filed Under: Sci/Tech: Software, Culture: Photography, Books: Reference, Books: Nonfiction, Books: Computers and Internet
- Part of a feature: The Enlightened Image
- Writer: T. Michael Testi
- T. Michael Testi's BC Writer page
- T. Michael Testi's personal site
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