
To hide a layer, simply tap the little circle in the top left corner of the thumbnail, and it will turn into an exclamation point (!) indicating the layer is not visible. If transparency is used in layers, you will be able to see through to what is underneath that top layer. Each layer is displayed as a thumbnail, and like on the desktop, the layer that is highest in the stack is what is visible. To the right of the screen is the layers palette.
Adobe photoshop touch Pc#
Photoshop on your Mac or PC is still available for when you need to do complicated and advanced tasks, but for a lot of other tasks, you could probably migrate to the iPad and Photoshop Touch.Įnough with the introduction, let’s dive into our review of Photoshop Touch. truck analogy that Steve Jobs rather famously explained. Sure, Photoshop Touch is still not as powerful as the desktop version, in fact it’s quite a distance away from reaching such parity - but it all comes down to the car Vs. It’s the apps that make the iPad great and Photoshop Touch is perhaps the prime example of the potential of the device and how flexible it is at becoming a great machine for a whole slew of different tasks, from reading, to writing, to viewing to editing and now, to using Photoshop for more than just basic photo edits. To me, it is the latest iPad app that has demonstrated that the iPad is for more than “content consumption” - that’s just an old myth now. Photoshop Touch is a powerful and capable version of Photoshop for the iPad, without a doubt. After a couple of hours playing around in the app (it accidentally went live yesterday, then Adobe pulled it) I’ve come away very impressed with what Adobe has accomplished. So when I finally got to try out Adobe Photoshop Touch, I was intrigued to see what Adobe had accomplished.

I didn’t think Adobe could pull off creating a great tablet version of Photoshop, and I wasn’t sure the iPad would be a good fit for the tasks in Photoshop.

At best I thought it might give you some good editing tools to fix and correct photographs, perhaps with some layer support and effects. I presumed it would be a very limited app compared to the powerful desktop app, or maybe just a slightly improved version of Photoshop Express. When I first heard that Adobe was bringing Photoshop to the iPad sometime last year, I was sceptical.
