roy
07-16-2005, 12:25 PM
I was wondering if the current version, to be used chiefly for the manufacture of negatives, is significantly better than 7. Any opinions ?
| View Full Version : Photoshop 7 or CS ? roy 07-16-2005, 12:25 PM I was wondering if the current version, to be used chiefly for the manufacture of negatives, is significantly better than 7. Any opinions ? sanking 07-16-2005, 01:31 PM I was wondering if the current version, to be used chiefly for the manufacture of negatives, is significantly better than 7. Any opinions ? CS allows the use of more tools with 16 bit files than 7. I find to be this a very important advantage. Sandy Joe Lipka 07-17-2005, 09:21 AM CS2 is now available with (alledgedly) more features than CS. I believe the chief improvements are in sharpening and in the correction of barrel distortion. DavidS 07-17-2005, 12:37 PM I was wondering if the current version, to be used chiefly for the manufacture of negatives, is significantly better than 7. Any opinions ? Forget 7 or CS. Adobe recently came out with CS2 which blows the original CS out of the water with a multitude of new features. I've been using it for the past month and I would never go back to 7 or CS. donbga 07-18-2005, 11:47 PM Forget 7 or CS. Adobe recently came out with CS2 which blows the original CS out of the water with a multitude of new features. I've been using it for the past month and I would never go back to 7 or CS. Hi David, I'm a CS owner and have resisted the upgrade to CS2. In the context of producing digital negatives, how does CS2 blow CS out of the water? Thanks, Don Bryant Joe Lipka 07-19-2005, 11:00 AM I have seen evidence of the sharpening functions in images between CS and CS2. CS2 is superior. The ability to edit with 16 bit depth instead of 8 bit depth will lead to smoother tones. I do plan to upgrade, as soon as my college age daughter can go back to the campus bookstore and purchase the "student discount" version to give to her dear old dad. :D David A. Goldfarb 07-19-2005, 11:14 AM If she has a valid student ID (or if you have a valid faculty ID), you can get software and some hardware items at academic rates from www.academicsuperstore.com. (moderation strangeness--I accidentally clicked "edit" instead of "quick reply" when I first posted this, and now that I have superhuman moderator powers, I accidentally posted it into Joe's response, instead of as a reply. All fixed now) donbga 07-21-2005, 10:26 PM I have seen evidence of the sharpening functions in images between CS and CS2. CS2 is superior. The ability to edit with 16 bit depth instead of 8 bit depth will lead to smoother tones. :D Joe, Apparently I must be missing something here. I can edit in 16 bit mode with CS. Why are the sharpening functions so much improved? Perhaps you can point me to a link that illustrates the improvements. If it's that good I might upgrade. Thanks for your help, Don Bryant |