 | Junior Member with 8 posts. | | | | Solved: size of image in a specific layer in photoshop cs3 Is there a way in photoshop cs3 to determine the size of an image that has been resized with the transform control? I want a series of images in different layers all exactly the same size but have only been able to accomplish this by figuring it out manually through using the ruler. | | Distinguished Member with 12,142 posts. | | Join Date: May 2005 Location: Kokomo, IN Experience: More Input Please | | Quote:
Originally Posted by nawlins I want a series of images in different layers all exactly the same size ... | Not really sure I understand what you want ...
But have you thought of using Grids or Guides ??
And maybe setting the ruler units to pixels ??
And Welcome to the TSG forum | | Junior Member with 8 posts. | | | | size of image in a specific layer in photoshop cs3 No. I actually haven't and will have to look into using a "grid" or a "guide". Just to clarify, say for instance you've added a jpg image to a layer. When you add it, you know what size it is because photoshop leaves it at the size that you imported it at (or dragged from a layer of some other photoshop file). But if you transform it by resizing it, you no longer know what size that transformed image is. You don't know the pixel dimensions anymore. So I didn't know if there was a tool in photoshop that would identify the dimensions of that resized image, or any image on any other layer for that matter. Thanks for helping me with this. | | Distinguished Member with 12,142 posts. | | Join Date: May 2005 Location: Kokomo, IN Experience: More Input Please | | You can transform to a specific scale percentage .. will this help ?? | | Distinguished Member with 12,142 posts. | | Join Date: May 2005 Location: Kokomo, IN Experience: More Input Please | | Click on the link to lock aspect ratio .. and type in what ever you want. | | Junior Member with 8 posts. | | | | Well, not really because the images imported are not all the same size. So if I wanted to "thumbnail" them, to all be 75 x 75, a scaled percentage wouldn't work. I could create new images of each of them in new psd files, resize them to exact dimensions, then pull them back in but that seems like overkill for something as simple as otherwise having a tool to show the size of an image in a layer. Maybe I should be asking is there a way to see the dimensions of a layer. An images "fills" the layers box so a layer's dimensions would be just as good. Does that make any sense? | | Distinguished Member with 12,142 posts. | | Join Date: May 2005 Location: Kokomo, IN Experience: More Input Please | | ????
I'd use the freeware Irfanview and batch process the resizing to a specific size ... then import them into photoshop. http://www.irfanview.com/ | | Distinguished Member with 12,142 posts. | | Join Date: May 2005 Location: Kokomo, IN Experience: More Input Please | | You can also have two (or more) photoshop windows open.
Resize in one .. then Drag to the other to a new layer. | | Junior Member with 8 posts. | | | | I see what you're saying with the "lock aspect ratio" recommendation but unless I'm missing a toolbar control, that pertains to the entire image. I'm looking for something more layer specific. | | Distinguished Member with 12,142 posts. | | Join Date: May 2005 Location: Kokomo, IN Experience: More Input Please |
19-Nov-2008, 10:18 PM
#10 | It's specific to whatever layer is active .. and being worked on .. (transformed) | | Junior Member with 8 posts. | | |
19-Nov-2008, 10:20 PM
#11 | Thanks, Noyb. Yeah, I believe I'll just have to open multiple photoshop windows to do what I'm trying to do. It just seems so nonsensical. When a layer is clicked, and the show transform controls is checked, you see the bounding box. I'd just like to know the dimensions of it. Then when I transform it, whatever was showing the dimensions could reveal those images size values dynamically. Thanks again. I'm fairly new to photoshop and thought I may have been missing something. | | Junior Member with 8 posts. | | |
19-Nov-2008, 10:21 PM
#12 | OH! YOU SAY IT IS SPECIFIC TO THE LAYER! OH! Hmmm...How do I turn that toolbar on? | | Junior Member with 8 posts. | | |
19-Nov-2008, 10:22 PM
#13 | I see. I see. CTRL + T. Besides the X and Y coordinate, it only shows percentages for the w and h values.... | | Distinguished Member with 12,142 posts. | | Join Date: May 2005 Location: Kokomo, IN Experience: More Input Please |
19-Nov-2008, 10:23 PM
#14 | It comes up in free transform.
I'm doing a lot of guessing .. it'd really help to see what you're working with.
Got to unplug this computer for tonight.
Hope I can help tomorrow .. Or someone else jumps in. | | Junior Member with 8 posts. | | |
19-Nov-2008, 10:26 PM
#15 | Thanks. I'll just create a new window, resize, and move it back. Thanks! |  THIS THREAD HAS EXPIRED.
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