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Using Help
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352
Adobe Photoshop Help
Using Type
Using Help
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Contents
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352
2
Select an option for Point/Pica Size. Traditional points are slightly smaller than
PostScript points.
Changing the type color
The type you enter gets its color from the current foreground color; however, you can
change the type color before or after you enter type. When editing existing type layers,
you can change the color of individual, selected characters or all type in a layer.
To change the type color:
Do one of the following:
•
Click the Color selection box in the options bar or Character palette, and select a color
using the color picker. In ImageReady, you can also select an option from the Color
selection box pop-up menu: Foreground Color, Background Color, Other (to use the
color picker), or a color from the pop-up palette.
•
Use fill shortcuts. To fill with the foreground color, press Alt+Backspace (Windows) or
Delete (Mac OS); to fill with the background color, press Ctrl+Backspace
(Windows) or Delete (Mac OS).
•
Apply an overlay layer style to the type layer to apply a color, pattern, or gradient on top
of the existing color. (See
“Using layer effects and styles” on page 301
.) In ImageReady,
you can drag a color from the toolbox color selection box, the Color palette, the Color
Table palette, or the Swatches palette, and drop it onto a type layer to automatically
apply a color overlay style. Applying an overlay layer style affects all characters in the
type layer; you cannot use this method to change the color of individual characters.
•
Click the foreground color selection box in the toolbox, and select a color using the
color picker. Or click a color in the Color palette, the Swatches palette, or the Color Table
palette (ImageReady). To use this method to change the color of an existing type layer,
you must first select characters on that layer.
Specifying leading
The amount of space between lines of type is called
leading
. For Roman type, leading is
measured from the baseline of one line of type to the baseline of the next line. The
baseline
is the invisible line on which most type lies. You can apply more than one leading
amount within the same paragraph; however, the largest leading value in a line of type
determines the leading value for that line.
You can use other options to set leading for Chinese, Japanese, or Korean type. (See
“Specifying how leading is measured” on page 364
.)
5-point type with 6-point leading, and with 12-point leading