Basic Tools Of Photoshop - The Toolbar




Move Tool (Keyboard: V)


   The move tool simply lets you move objects in a given layer around the Photoshop canvas. To use it, click anywhere on the canvas and drag. As you drag, the Photoshop layer will move with your mouse.


Marquee (Keyboard: M)

   The marquee lets you select part of the canvas in a specific shape. By default you get a rectangular , but you can also select in the shape of an ellipse 


Lasso (Keyboard: L)

   The lasso is a free-form selection tool that lets you drag around the canvas and select anything the lasso'd area covers. Within this tool you also have access to the polygonal lasso, which lets you create a selection by clicking around on the canvas and creating points, and the magnetic lasso, which works the same as the regular lasso but attempts to detect edges for you and automatically snap to them.


Magic Wand (Keyboard: W)

   Clicking an area with the magic wand will tell Photoshop to select the spot you clicked on and anything around it that's similar. This tool can be used as a crude way to remove backgrounds from photos.


Crop Tool (Keyboard: C)

   The crop tool is used to crop your pictures. You can specify the exact size and constrain the crop tool to those proportions, or you can just crop to any size you please.


Eyedropper (Keyboard: I)

   The eyedropper tool lets you click on any part of the canvas and sample the color at that exact point. The eyedropper will change your foreground color to whatever color it sampled from the canvas.


Healing Brush (Keyboard: J)

  The healing brush lets you sample part of the photograph and use it to paint over another part. Once you're finished, Photoshop will examine surrounding areas and try to blend what you painted in with the rest of the picture.


Paintbrush and Pencil (Keyboard: B)

  The paintbrush is a tool that emulates a paintbrush and the pencil is a tool that emulates a pencil. The paintbrush, however, can be set to many different kinds of brushes. 


Clone Stamp (Keyboard: S)

  Like the healing brush, the clone stamp lets you sample part of the photograph and use it to paint over another part. 


History Brush (Keyboard: Y)

  The history brush lets you paint back in time. Photoshop keeps track of all the moves you make and the history brush lets you paint the past back into the current photo. Say you brightened up the entire photo but you wanted to make a certain area look like it did before you brightened it, you can take the history brush and paint that area to bring back the previous darkness.


Eraser Tool (Keyboard: E)

  The erase tool is almost identical to the paintbrush, except it erases instead of paints.


 Gradient Tools (Keyboard: G)

  The paint can tool lets you fill in a specific area with the current foreground color. The gradient tool will, by default, create a gradient that blends the foreground and background tool .


Blur, Sharpen, and Smudge Tools (Keyboard: R)

   The blur tool will blur the area where you paint, the sharpen tool will sharpen it, and the smudge tool will smudge the area all around the canvas. 


Burn, Dodge, and Sponge Tools (Keyboard: O)

  The burn, dodge, and sponge tools are paintbrush-like tools that manipulate light and color intensity. The burn tool can make areas in your photo darker. The dodge tool can make them lighter. The sponge tool can saturate or desaturate color in the area you paint with it.


Pen Tool (Keyboard: P)

  The pen tool is used for drawing vector graphics. It can also be used to create paths that can be used for various things .


Hand Tool (Keyboard: H)

  The hand tool allows you to click and drag around the Photoshop canvas. If the entire canvas currently fits on the screen, this tool won't do anything. This tool is for easily navigating around when you're zoomed in, or a picture is simple too big to fit on the screen at 100%.


Color Selection Tools (Keyboard: D for defaults, X to switch foreground and background colors)

  These tools let you manage the colors you're using. The color on top is the foreground color and the color in back is the background color. The foreground color is what your brushes will use. 



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