Справочник Пользователя для Adobe photoshop cs2

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ADOBE PHOTOSHOP CS2 
User Guide 
You can create an HDR image using multiple photographs, each captured at a different exposure. In Photoshop, the 
Merge To HDR command lets you create HDR images from multiple photographs. Because an HDR image contains 
brightness levels that far exceed the display capabilities of a standard 24-bit monitor or the range of tones in a printed 
image, Photoshop lets you adjust the preview of the HDR image so it can be viewed on a computer monitor. Some 
Photoshop tools, adjustments, and filters can be used with HDR images. If you need to print the image or use 
Photoshop tools and filters that don’t work with HDR images, you can convert the HDR image to an 8- or 16-bits-
per-channel image. 
Working with HDR images 
Photoshop lets you use the following tools, adjustments, and filters with 32-bits-per-channel HDR images: 
Adjustments 
Channel Mixer, Photo Filter, and Exposure. 
Note: Although the Exposure command can be used with 8- and 16-bits-per-channel images, it is designed for making 
exposure adjustments to 32-bits-per-channel HDR images. 
Blend Modes 
Normal, Darken, Multiply, Lighten, Linear Dodge, and Difference. 
Editing Commands 
Fill, Stroke, Free Transform, Transform, Image Size, Canvas Size, Rotate Canvas, Crop (with 
rotation and resize), and Trim. 
File Formats 
Photoshop (PSD, PSB), Radiance (HDR), Portable Bit Map (PFM), OpenEXR, and TIFF. 
Note: Although Photoshop cannot save an HDR image in the LogLuv TIFF file format, it can open and read a LogLuv 
TIFF file. 
Filters 
Average, Box Blur, Gaussian Blur, Motion Blur, Radial Blur, Shape Blur, Surface Blur, Add Noise, Fibers, Lens 
Flare, Smart Sharpen, Unsharp Mask, De-Interlace, NTSC Colors, High Pass, and Offset. 
Modes 
RGB Color, Grayscale, conversion to 8 Bits/Channel or 16 Bits/Channel. 
Tools 
Marquee tools, Move tool, lasso tools, Crop tool, Slice tool, Clone Stamp tool, History Brush tool, Path 
Selection tool, Direct Selection tool, pen tools, annotation tools, Eyedropper tool, Color Sampler tool, Measure tool, 
Hand tool, and Zoom tool. Some tools work with supported blend modes only. 
See also 
The Merge To HDR command 
Use the  Merge To HDR  command  to  combine multiple images (with  different  exposures)  of  the same image  or  scene,  
capturing the dynamic range of a scene in a single HDR image. You can choose to save the merged image as a 32-bits-
per-channel HDR image. 
Note: It’s also possible to use the Merge To HDR command to save the merged image as an 8- or 16-bits-per-channel 
image. However, only a 32-bits-per-channel image can store all the HDR image data; 8- and 16-bits-per-channel images 
will be clipped. 
Keep the following tips in mind when you take photos to be combined with the Merge To HDR command: 
Secure the camera to a tripod. 
Take enough photos to cover the full dynamic range of the scene. You can try taking at least five to seven photos, 
but you  might need to take more exposures  depending on the  dynamic range  of  the scene. The  minimum number  
of photos should be three.