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Teach Yourself Adobe Photoshop CS2.pdf - Online Public Access ...

Teach Yourself Adobe Photoshop CS2.pdf - Online Public Access ...

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This document was created by an unregistered ChmMagic, please go to http://www.bisenter.com to register it. Thanks.Color Bit Depth and Why It MattersBit depth is a way to describe how much color information is available about each pixel in an image. It's also called color depth or pixeldepth and, as with so many other things, more is better. Greater bit depth (more bits of information per pixel) means more availablecolors and more accurate color representation in your digital pictures. Consider this: a pixel with a bit depth of 1 has only 2 possiblevalues, either black or white. A grayscale pixel with a bit depth of 8 has 2 to the 8th power, or 256 possible values. And a pixel with a bitdepth of 24 has 2 to the 24th power, or about 16 million, possible values. Common values for bit depth range from 1 to 64 bits per pixel.You will find that your <strong>Photoshop</strong> images tend to be either 8-bit or 16-bit. More information means larger files and longer times, ofcourse. And it also means truer color.8-Bit ColorIt's actually a little bit misleading to call 8-bit color by that name. Depending on the color mode you've chosen to work in, you haveanywhere from 8 to 32 bits of information for each pixel. In RBG mode, you have 8 bits each of the red, blue, and green color channels,making 24 bits of color information. In CMYK mode, you have 8 bits each of four channels, or 32 bits in all.16-Bit ColorIn previous versions of <strong>Photoshop</strong>, not all of the tools and filters worked with 16-bit color. As of <strong>Photoshop</strong> CS2, all tools and most filtersare 16-bit compatible. Does this mean you should do all your work in 16-bit color? No. Technology moves forward in uneven leaps. Eventhough <strong>Photoshop</strong> can work in 16-bit color, your monitor can't show you all the millions of colors your image has. And your home/officeinkjet or color laser printer can't possibly reproduce them. Within a year or so, this might change as new HDTV monitors and betterprinting inks come on the market. <strong>Adobe</strong> has, in effect, raised the bar, and now makers of monitors and printers will have to jump thatmuch higher. The next frontier? 32-bit colorbut <strong>Photoshop</strong>'s support for it at this point is still so limited that it's best to leave it alone.

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