Adobe photoshop cs2 사용자 설명서

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Chapter 4: Adobe Bridge
The basics of Bridge 
About Adobe Bridge 
Adobe Bridge is the control center for Adobe Creative Suite. You use it to organize, browse, and locate the assets you 
need to create content for print, the web, and mobile devices. Adobe Bridge keeps native PSD, AI, INDD, and Adobe 
PDF files as well as other Adobe and non-Adobe application files available for easy access.You can drag assets into 
your layouts as needed, preview them, and even add metadata to them. Bridge is available independently, as well as 
from within Adobe Photoshop, Adobe Illustrator, Adobe InDesign, and Adobe GoLive. 
File browsing 
From Bridge you can view, search, sort, manage, and process image files. You can use Bridge to create 
new folders; rename, move, and delete files; edit metadata; rotate images; and run batch commands. You can also 
view information about files and data imported from your digital camera. 
Version Cue 
If you have Adobe Creative Suite, you can use Bridge as a central location from which to use Adobe 
Version Cue. From Bridge, you can browse all the files in a project in one place without having to start the native 
application for each file, including non-Adobe application files. Also, you can create new Version Cue projects, delete 
projects, create versions, save alternates, and set access privileges in Bridge. See “Working with Version Cue in 
Bridge” on page 101. 
Bridge Center 
If you have Adobe Creative Suite, Adobe Bridge includes Bridge Center, the “dashboard” of Adobe 
Creative  Suite,  where you  can view news readers  in  your  web browser, see  your  most  recent  activity, read about  tips  
and tricks for using Adobe products, save groups of files, and more. Adobe Creative Suite users can also use Bridge 
to  specify color  management  settings  and access  scripts that help automate your workflow.  See “About Bridge Center”  
on page 92. 
Camera Raw 
If you have Adobe Photoshop installed, you can open and edit camera raw files from Bridge and save 
them in a Photoshop-compatible format. You can edit the image settings directly in the Camera Raw dialog box 
without starting Photoshop. If you don’t have Photoshop installed, you can still preview the camera raw files in 
Bridge. See “To open files in Bridge” on page 87. 
Stock Photos 
Click Adobe Stock Photos from the Favorites pane in Bridge to search leading stock libraries for 
royalty-free images. You can download low-resolution, complementary versions of the images and try them out in 
your projects before purchasing them. See “About Adobe Stock Photos” on page 103. 
Color management 
You can use Bridge to synchronize color settings across applications. This synchronization 
ensures that colors look the same no matter which Creative Suite application you view them in. See “To synchronize 
color settings across Adobe applications” on page 254. 
See also 
The Bridge work area 
These are the main components of the Adobe Bridge window: