This is Interesting: Free Magazines for Graphics designers and webmasters  


Home > Archive > Computer Graphics with Photoshop > June 2005 > Can anyone recommend a *good* Photoshop CS2 book?





You are viewing an archived Text-only version of the thread. To view this thread in it's original format and/or if you want to reply to this thread please [click here]

Author Can anyone recommend a *good* Photoshop CS2 book?
Dot Proulx

2005-06-09, 7:15 pm

I'm not exactly a newbie at Photoshop, but I'm still really an amateur. And
I learn best from books. Can anyone recommend a really good one for CS2?

Thanks,
Dot


Craig Flory

2005-06-09, 7:15 pm

You will never go wrong with a book by Scott Kelby. And Daniel Giordan has
good books on Photoshop. I own several by Scott on CS and one by Dan and all
are very good. I'm sure people who own CS2 will give you good titles but
these two men write great Photoshop books. Scott Kelby is the head of NAPP
... the National Association of Photoshop Professionals and really knows his
stuff.
Craig Flory


Hecate

2005-06-09, 7:15 pm

On Thu, 09 Jun 2005 20:11:54 GMT, "Craig Flory"
<floryphotog@mindspring.com> wrote:

>You will never go wrong with a book by Scott Kelby.



Then again, you'll never go right either :) And that's if you can
stand the extremely unfunny and corny text.

>And Daniel Giordan has
>good books on Photoshop. I own several by Scott on CS and one by Dan and all
>are very good. I'm sure people who own CS2 will give you good titles but
>these two men write great Photoshop books. Scott Kelby is the head of NAPP
>.. the National Association of Photoshop Professionals and really knows his
>stuff.


If it's flashy and you might use it once in a lifetime. :)

Try the Adobe Classroom in a Book. It'll give you a good grounding in
Photoshop. Then go to a book store (even if you're going to buy
online) and browse the books, read a little and buy one that appeals
to you.

--

Hecate - The Real One
Hecate@newsguy.com
Fashion: Buying things you don't need, with money
you don't have, to impress people you don't like...
Hunt

2005-06-09, 11:15 pm

In article <d89se3$7uu$1@license1.unx.sas.com>, dorothy.proulx@sas.com says...
>
>I'm not exactly a newbie at Photoshop, but I'm still really an amateur. And
>I learn best from books. Can anyone recommend a really good one for CS2?
>
>Thanks,
>Dot


Dot,

You might also give some info as to how you plan on using PS, and what you
want it to do for you. Many of the books are geared toward one aspect, or
another. This does not mean that there isn't something to be learned from
most, only that you might get more out of a tome designed for how you want PS
to perform.

For instance, if you are a photographer, or work with photographer's work in
pre-press, or image assembly for CMYK printing, I'd recommend Adobe Photoshop
XX (fill in the version that you have) Studio Techniques, Ben Wilmore, Adobe
Press.

Hecate's suggestion of CIAB is probably the first place to start, then move on
from there. Unfortunately, I do not know Craig's suggested books, but bet they
are excellent, as well.

Hunt

Dot Proulx

2005-06-10, 7:19 pm

Good idea, Hunt. BTW, I've found this newsgroup invaluable for picking up
tips. If I had time to read all the postings, I probably wouldn't need a
book.

I'm a decidedly amateur but serious photographer who has generally gotten
better over the last 30 years of "taking pictures." I love both my Nikon
N70 and my D100. Most photos are taken at family events, vacations, dog
shows, or just messing around in my gardens at home. --nothing in studios,
nothing for the printing industry.

I've used computers for even longer, so it's a natural fit to want to
combine the two hobbies. I used to scan in my photos to work on them in
Photoshop, but digital makes it so much easier...

I use Photoshop to enhance my own work for my own use. I often do color
corrections and use levels for less than perfect lighting--and to make the
photos "pop." I crop for better composition. So what I want is to learn
features of this very complicated program and which is best for what I'm
trying to do.

Dot

"Hunt" <noone@hunt.com> wrote in message
news:d8ardv0146p@news1.newsguy.com...
| In article <d89se3$7uu$1@license1.unx.sas.com>, dorothy.proulx@sas.com
says...
| >
| >I'm not exactly a newbie at Photoshop, but I'm still really an amateur.
And
| >I learn best from books. Can anyone recommend a really good one for CS2?
| >
| >Thanks,
| >Dot
|
| Dot,
|
| You might also give some info as to how you plan on using PS, and what you
| want it to do for you. Many of the books are geared toward one aspect, or
| another. This does not mean that there isn't something to be learned from
| most, only that you might get more out of a tome designed for how you want
PS
| to perform.
|
| For instance, if you are a photographer, or work with photographer's work
in
| pre-press, or image assembly for CMYK printing, I'd recommend Adobe
Photoshop
| XX (fill in the version that you have) Studio Techniques, Ben Wilmore,
Adobe
| Press.
|
| Hecate's suggestion of CIAB is probably the first place to start, then
move on
| from there. Unfortunately, I do not know Craig's suggested books, but bet
they
| are excellent, as well.
|
| Hunt
|


Dot Proulx

2005-06-10, 7:20 pm

Oh, and I should have added that I've scanned in the family photo archive
that goes back to about 1900. Some of these photos need a lot of help, as
you can imagine.
Dot

"Dot Proulx" <dorothy.proulx@sas.com> wrote in message
news:d8bv95$865$1@license1.unx.sas.com...
| Good idea, Hunt. BTW, I've found this newsgroup invaluable for picking up
| tips. If I had time to read all the postings, I probably wouldn't need a
| book.
|
| I'm a decidedly amateur but serious photographer who has generally gotten
| better over the last 30 years of "taking pictures." I love both my Nikon
| N70 and my D100. Most photos are taken at family events, vacations, dog
| shows, or just messing around in my gardens at home. --nothing in
studios,
| nothing for the printing industry.
|
| I've used computers for even longer, so it's a natural fit to want to
| combine the two hobbies. I used to scan in my photos to work on them in
| Photoshop, but digital makes it so much easier...
|
| I use Photoshop to enhance my own work for my own use. I often do color
| corrections and use levels for less than perfect lighting--and to make the
| photos "pop." I crop for better composition. So what I want is to learn
| features of this very complicated program and which is best for what I'm
| trying to do.
|
| Dot
|
| "Hunt" <noone@hunt.com> wrote in message
| news:d8ardv0146p@news1.newsguy.com...
|| In article <d89se3$7uu$1@license1.unx.sas.com>, dorothy.proulx@sas.com
| says...
|| >
|| >I'm not exactly a newbie at Photoshop, but I'm still really an amateur.
| And
|| >I learn best from books. Can anyone recommend a really good one for
CS2?
|| >
|| >Thanks,
|| >Dot
||
|| Dot,
||
|| You might also give some info as to how you plan on using PS, and what
you
|| want it to do for you. Many of the books are geared toward one aspect, or
|| another. This does not mean that there isn't something to be learned from
|| most, only that you might get more out of a tome designed for how you
want
| PS
|| to perform.
||
|| For instance, if you are a photographer, or work with photographer's work
| in
|| pre-press, or image assembly for CMYK printing, I'd recommend Adobe
| Photoshop
|| XX (fill in the version that you have) Studio Techniques, Ben Wilmore,
| Adobe
|| Press.
||
|| Hecate's suggestion of CIAB is probably the first place to start, then
| move on
|| from there. Unfortunately, I do not know Craig's suggested books, but bet
| they
|| are excellent, as well.
||
|| Hunt
||
|
|


Hunt

2005-06-10, 7:20 pm

In article <d8bv95$865$1@license1.unx.sas.com>, dorothy.proulx@sas.com says...
>
>Good idea, Hunt. BTW, I've found this newsgroup invaluable for picking up
>tips. If I had time to read all the postings, I probably wouldn't need a
>book.
>
>I'm a decidedly amateur but serious photographer who has generally gotten
>better over the last 30 years of "taking pictures." I love both my Nikon
>N70 and my D100. Most photos are taken at family events, vacations, dog
>shows, or just messing around in my gardens at home. --nothing in studios,
>nothing for the printing industry.
>
>I've used computers for even longer, so it's a natural fit to want to
>combine the two hobbies. I used to scan in my photos to work on them in
>Photoshop, but digital makes it so much easier...
>
>I use Photoshop to enhance my own work for my own use. I often do color
>corrections and use levels for less than perfect lighting--and to make the
>photos "pop." I crop for better composition. So what I want is to learn
>features of this very complicated program and which is best for what I'm
>trying to do.
>
>Dot
>
>"Hunt" <noone@hunt.com> wrote in message
>news:d8ardv0146p@news1.newsguy.com...
>| In article <d89se3$7uu$1@license1.unx.sas.com>, dorothy.proulx@sas.com
>says...

[SNIP]
>|
>| For instance, if you are a photographer, or work with photographer's work
>in
>| pre-press, or image assembly for CMYK printing, I'd recommend Adobe
>Photoshop
>| XX (fill in the version that you have) Studio Techniques, Ben Wilmore,
>Adobe
>| Press.
>|
>| Hecate's suggestion of CIAB is probably the first place to start, then
>move on
>| from there.

[SNIP]

Thank you. Now I stand by my "Studio Techniques" recommendation. There is
another book (sorry, but I don't have a copy handy to give you the details)
that covers "camera RAW" and is directed to RAW and PS - someone out there
help me please. It has been highly recommended for that exact purpose.

Do CIAB PSx, then do Studio Techniques, then look into the camera RAW book.
Lastly, do you shoot RAW? If not, please consider doing so.

Hunt

Hunt

2005-06-10, 7:20 pm

In article <d8bvoa$8fa$1@license1.unx.sas.com>, dorothy.proulx@sas.com says...
>
>Oh, and I should have added that I've scanned in the family photo archive
>that goes back to about 1900. Some of these photos need a lot of help, as
>you can imagine.
>Dot

[SNIP]

In this case, also look at "Photoshop Restoration and Retouching"
by Katrin Eismann. I'd put this as a possible #3 in your Summer reading list.

Hunt

Hunt

2005-06-10, 11:15 pm

In article <d8cho6$i55$1@license1.unx.sas.com>, dorothy.proulx@sas.com says...
>
>Thanks to all for the suggestions and guidance. I will look at each of
>these and select the ones I think most fit my needs.
>
>There's a book on Amazon that is titled "Real World Camera Raw with Adobe
>Photoshop CS2" by Bruce Fraser. Hunt, is this the one you mentioned?
>
>Thanks again,
>Dot


[SNIP]

Yes, sorry that I could not come up with the title/author, but I was at the
pool with the laptop and not in the office :-)

Hunt

Hecate

2005-06-10, 11:15 pm

On Fri, 10 Jun 2005 08:06:32 -0400, "Dot Proulx"
<dorothy.proulx@sas.com> wrote:

>Oh, and I should have added that I've scanned in the family photo archive
>that goes back to about 1900. Some of these photos need a lot of help, as
>you can imagine.
>Dot
>

Hi again,

For working on image restoration there is no better book (in fact
there is no book as good as) Katrin Eismann's Photoshop Restoration
and Retouching.

--

Hecate - The Real One
Hecate@newsguy.com
Fashion: Buying things you don't need, with money
you don't have, to impress people you don't like...
Barry Pearson

2005-06-11, 7:15 pm

C Wright wrote:
[snip]
> The camera raw book to which I would guess that you are referring is 'Real
> World Camera Raw with Adobe Photoshop CS" by Bruce Fraser. While it does
> not cover the specific version of Camera Raw in CS2 it is still extremely
> helpful to anyone who shoots raw.


There is a new version for CS2. It is about 60% changed I think. (I
haven't got mine yet, but the CS version was VERY useful indeed).

--
Barry Pearson
http://www.barry.pearson.name/photography/
http://www.birdsandanimals.info/

Mick Brown

2005-06-12, 7:14 am

"Barry Pearson" <news@childsupportanalysis.co.uk> wrote in
news:1118491954.687494.99750@z14g2000cwz.googlegroups.com:

> C Wright wrote:
> [snip]
>
> There is a new version for CS2. It is about 60% changed I think. (I
> haven't got mine yet, but the CS version was VERY useful indeed).
>
> --
> Barry Pearson
> http://www.barry.pearson.name/photography/
> http://www.birdsandanimals.info/
>
>


Anything by scott kelby is good too
Sponsored Links


Copyright 2003 - 2008 forum4designers.com  Software forum  Computer Hardware reviews