This is a summarized explanation of Photoshop’s Tools palette with a short and to the point description of each tool’s functions and shortcuts. This is a great tutorial for novice Photoshop users, as well as professional advanced users who would like to brush up on their Photoshop Tools knowledge.
I will start from the beginning. The very beginning. Short cut keys are show inside the parenthesis.
Rectangular Marquee Tool (M)
Use this tool to make selections on your image, in a rectangular shape. This changes the area of your image that is affected by other tools or actions to be within the defined shape. Holding the [Shift] key while dragging your selection, restricts the shape to a perfect square. Holding the [Alt/Opt] key while dragging sets the center of the rectangle to where your cursor started.
Move Tool (V)
Use this tool to, well, move things. Usually you use it to move a Layer around after it has been placed. Hold the [Shift] key to limit the movements to vertical/horizontal.
Polygon Lasso Tool (L)
Ok, this should be the Lasso Tool, but I use the Polygon Lasso a lot more often. Use this to draw selections in whatever shape you would like. To close the selection, either click on the beginning point (you’ll see the cursor change when you’re on it), or just double-click. When holding the [Ctrl/Cmmd] key, you’ll see the cursor change, and the next time you click, it will close your selection.
Magic Wand Tool (W)
Use this to select a color range. It will select the block of color, or transparency, based on wherever you click. In the Options Bar at the top, you can change the Tolerance to make your selections more/less precise.
Crop Tool (C)
The Crop Tool works similarly to the Rectangular Marquee tool (see above if you have no short-term memory). The difference is when you press the [Enter/Return] key, it crops your image to the size of the box. Any information that was on the outside of the box is now gone. Not permanently, you can still undo.
Slice Tool (K)
This is used mostly for building websites, or splitting up one image into smaller ones when using the “save for web” feature. It’s kind of an advanced tool, and since you’re here for the basics, we’ll save this tool for another day.
Healing Brush Tool (J)
This is a really useful tool. Mildly advanced. You can use this tool to repair scratches, specs and small imperfections on images. It works like the Brush tool (see below). You choose your cursor size, then holding the [Alt/Opt] key, you select a nice/clean area of your image. Let go of the [Alt/Opt] key and paint over the bad area. It basically copies the info from the first area to the second, in the form of the Brush tool. Only, at the end, it averages the information, so it blends.
Brush Tool (B)
This is one of the first tools ever. It’s what Photoshop is based on. Well, not really, but it can be a building block for many Photoshop tasks. It paints your image, in whatever color you have selected, and whatever size you have selected. There’s a lot of options available to customize this tool, but we’re sticking to the basics. We’ll save the advanced options for another tutorial.
Clone Stamp Tool (S)
This is very similar to the Healing Brush Tool (see above). You use it the exact same way, except this tool doesn’t blend at the end. It’s a direct copy of the information from the first selected area to the second. When you learn to use both of these tools together in perfect harmony, you will be a Photoshop MASTA! (OK, maybe not a master, but definitely ready to move beyond basic tutorials.)
History Brush Tool (H)
This tool works just like the Brush Tool (see above) except the information that it paints with is from the original state of your image. If you go Window > History, you can see the History Palette. The History Brush tool paints with the information from whatever History state is selected.
Eraser Tool (E)
This is the anti-Brush tool. It works just like an eraser should and removes information wherever you click and drag it. If you’re on a Layer, it will erase the information and leave it transparent. If you are on the background layer, it erases your content and leaves the background color in its place.
Gradient Tool (G)
You can use this to make a gradiation of colors. It creates a blending of your foreground color and background color when you click and drag it. Like a gradient.
Blur Tool (R)
The Blur tool is cool. (It makes things blurry.) Click and drag to smoothly blend areas of your image.
Dodge Tool (O)
The Dodge and Burn tool is a carry-over from the days before dark rooms were digital. Back when you could Dodge or Burn select areas of an image to lighten or darken an image.
Path Selection Tool (A)
You use this tool when working with paths. It’s related to the Pen Tool (see below).
Horizontal Type Tool (T)
It makes type. Or text. Or whatever you want to call it. You can click a single point, and start typing right away. Or you can click and drag to make a bounding box of where your text/type goes. There’s a lot of options for the Type Tool. Just play around, it’s fairly straight-forward.
Pen Tool (P)
The Pen Tool is used for creating paths (in which you would use the Path Selection Tool to select the path). Paths can be used in a few different ways — mostly to create clipping paths or to create selections. You use the tool by clicking to add a point. If you click and drag, it will change the shape of your path, allowing you to bend and shape the path for accurate selections and such.
Rectangle Tool (U)
By default it draws a Shape Layer in the form of a rectangle. It fills the rectangle with whatever foreground color you have selected. It’s pretty complicated, don’t hurt yourself with this one.
Notes Tool (N)
Like post-it notes, but digital. You can use this tool to add small little note boxes to your image. These are useful if you’re very forgetful or if you’re sharing your Photoshop file with someone else. It only works with .PSD files.
Eyedropper Tool (I)
This tool works by changing your foreground color to whatever color you click on. Holding the [Alt/Opt] key will toggle between the foreground and background color.
Hand Tool (T)
You can move around using the Hand Tool. It’s for moving your entire image within a window. So if you’re zoomed in and your image area is larger than the window, you can use the Hand Tool to navigate around your image. Just click and drag. You can get to this tool at any time when using any other tool by pressing and holding the [Spacebar].
Zoom Tool (Z)
Pretty obvious what this tool does. It allows you to zoom into your image. Hold the [Alt] key to zoom out. Holding the [Shift] key will zoom all of the windows you have open at the same time. Double-click on the Zoom Tool in the palette to go back to 100% view.
BONUS!!
These are your color boxes. Foreground (in the front) and Background (in the back). Click on either one to bring up the color select dialog box. Use [X] to switch the two colors.
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