Adobe photoshop cs2 사용자 설명서

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ADOBE PHOTOSHOP CS2 
User Guide 
Crop with rotation and resize 
Fill and stroke (no pattern fill, supported blend modes only) 
Image Size and Canvas Size commands 
Trim command 
Arbitrary rotation and 90˚ rotation and flips 
Blend modes: Normal, Multiply, Difference, Lighten, Darken, Linear Dodge 
Free Transform command 
The following tools in the toolbox: Clone Stamp tool (supported blend modes only), and History Brush (supported 
blend modes only) 
Display of floating-point values in the Info palette 
Conversion to 8- or 16-bits-per-channel documents, and conversion from 16-bits-per-channel to 32-bits-per-
channel 
Conversion between RGB and Grayscale modes 
Support of the following file formats: PSD/PSB, TIFF, LogLUV TIFF (read-only), Radiance HDR, PFM, OpenEXR 
Support for the following image adjustment commands: Channel Mixer, Photo Filter, and Exposure. 
Support for the following plug-in filters: Average, Radial Blur, Fibers, Lens Flare, DeInterlace, and NTSC Colors 
Support for the following built-in filters: Surface Blur, Box Blur, Gaussian Blur, Motion Blur, Sampled/Shape Blur, 
Add Noise, Unsharp Mask, High Pass, Offset 
Save Selection and Load Selection commands 
To work with certain Photoshop features, such as layers, filters, and adjustments, you can convert a 32-bits-per-
channel image to a 16-bits-per-channel image. Do a Save As and convert a copy of the image file so that the original 
file retains the full 32-bits-per-channel image data. 
Note: It’s also possible to convert a 32-bits-per-channel image to 8 bits per channel. See “To convert from 32 bits to 8 or 
16 bits per channel” on page 205. 
See also 
To convert between 8 bits and 16 bits per channel 
❖ 
Choose Image > Mode > 16 Bits/Channel or 8 Bits/Channel. 
To convert from 16 bits to 32 bits per channel 
Open a 16-bit image. If necessary, flatten the image. Only flat images can be converted to 32-bits-per-channel 
mode. 
Choose Image > Mode > 32 Bits/Channel. 
Note: It’s also possible to convert a 32-bits-per-channel image to 8-bits-per-channel. See “To convert from 32 bits to 8 or 
16 bits per channel” on page 205.