Monday, March 22, 2010

File Under... Photoshop Geek-out

Legacy Hue/Sat and Curves Palettes

A lot of retouchers, and Photoshop pros I know have a hard time switching from CS3 to CS4 because they feel limited by the new palettes. Initially, my biggest sticking points were the curves palette and the hue / saturation palette. Like everyone, I use curve and hue / sat adjustment layers more than anything else, and the new palettes really interrupted the flow of my work. I didn't like the fact that they're open all the time and I really don't like the little hand / slider thing. The good news is there's a way to use the CS3 legacy palettes for curves and hue / saturation in CS4. Right now, its kind-of an oblique work-around, and hopefully this is something that the good people at Adobe will add to the next update of CS4, but for now it can be done using specialized actions.

**If you want to skip the "how-to make the actions" part, I'm adding a link to download the actions themselves. Be sure though tho read the "how-to use the actions" section.

How-to make the actions. Here's the funny thing. The actions have to be made in CS3. It works because the action step that does the trick isn't available in CS4 but will magically work there if it's part of an action. So, in CS3, make a new action group. Call it "Legacy Palettes". Now, make a new action. Call it "Curves Pallete". From the action palette pull-down menu, choose "insert menu item". Now, under the main navigation pull-down choose, Layer > Change Layer Content > Curves. That does it for curves. Now do the same thing for hue / sat. Make a new action. Call it "Hue Sat Pallete". From the action palette pull-down menu, choose "insert menu item". Now, under the main navigation pull-down choose, Layer > Change Layer Content > Hue/Saturation. Save the action group.


Now switch to CS4.

How-to use the actions. Load the actions into the actions palette. Set one of your unused function keys to each action. Let's say shift F12 for curves and shift F11 for HueSat. [See my earlier post about Speed Keys for more information on this part. Note: be sure none of your OS function keys are over-riding the F-keys in Photoshop.] Make a new curves adjustment layer. Press shift F12. You should be seeing magic - or at least the legacy curves palette. Press shift F12 again. Magic again - it disappears. Make a new hue sat adjustment layer. Press shift F11. Legacy hue sat palette. Shift F11 makes it disappear.

The reason why I recommend using shift F12 and shift F11 is because I use F12 to make a new curves adjustment layer and F11 to make a new hue sat adjustment layer. So pressing F11 then shift F11, makes a new hue sat adjustment layer and then opens the legacy palette.

Now, this method has one big problem. Because these actions use the Change Layer Content step, you have to be careful about what layer you are on when you use them. If you are on a curves adjustment layer (or any other adjustment layer) and use use the shift F11 hue sat palette action, it will turn that layer into a hue sat layer. So, until this is something that the Adobe people add into Photoshop, just be careful.

Here's the link to download the actions pre-made. Enjoy.

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