![]() ![]() Each of these commands has a movable slider to pick just the right value. The Brushes section gives you quick access to brush color, size, hardness, opacity and flow. Controls for changing the blend mode and scrubbing through the history are especially nice to use on the Touch Bar Retina display because of a visual preview of the result. Inside the Layer Properties section, you can quickly access common actions like place a Smart Object, clip Layers, and open Select & Mask. In designing the interaction with the Touch Bar, we imagined three distinct categories of functions that would be useful to our customers: Layer Properties, Brushes, and (true to Photoshop’s ethos) your customizable Favorites. Here’s what Stephen Nielson, Senior Product Manager for Photoshop has to say: ![]() For those who do high-end retouching or general Photoshopping, the likelihood is we’ll be using a tablet of some sort (even an iPad), and we can already program certain keys and functions to said tablets, so the question is who exactly this is meant for, and at what level. What she demonstrated was interesting, and impressive, albeit limited. During the keynote release of the MBP, Photoshop’s Experience Design Manager, Bradee Evans, demonstrated to us the Touch Bar in action with Photoshop, claiming the new MacBook Pro and Touch Bar were “made for each other.” Her theory was that working with the new larger trackpad and Touch Bar created a new but very natural way to interact and wield with the vaunted program, but until now that hasn’t been an option. ![]()
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