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Thursday, March 15, 2012

Using Photoshop Actions for Rapid, Quality E-Learning Images

When developing eLearning courses, particularly those of a longer variety, we often create re-usable page templates that include elements such as the GUI, a content area, and a designated space for graphics.  A simple picture (and its thousand words) often is the best visual tool for supporting the content, but just plopping down a raw image typically will jar the overall look-and-feel (especially if your GUI is up to modern standards) and can throw off the entire course (think of a Porsche with primer paint...).

Giving the image an appropriate border treatment or other graphic enhancement (whether we’re talking altering the photo itself or adding things like drop shadows or reflections) will allow your image to work like a part of the team, rather than a distraction that should be benched.

Of course, image treatment takes work and time...and remember my reference to courses "of a longer variety?" What to do when you need treated images on several pages?

You could spend all your time replicating the same graphic design technique over and over...Or you could do it once while recording your technique in Photoshop as an action and then apply that action to your stack of images, potentially saving you countless hours otherwise spent in a PS rut.

http://www.republicofcode.com/tutorials/photoshop/mass_resize/

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