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Ok, for those of you who are familiar with my
weekly column or my website, you are by now familiar with this
topic somewhat. Still, the requests assail me in my email
continually asking how to reproduce the effects seen in various
actions without using the action to make them. What are the
steps involved? Is there a way to get a list of the commands in
an action? If cheese is really a mold culture, why is it yellow
and not green?
The cheese question will have to iron itself
out. As for reproducing the effects in Actions, that I can help
with and hopefully clarify any sticking points you may have.
Ok, say I have found an action online or etched
on a CD that came with some ancient tome I purchased from Joe’s
Online Ancient Tome Emporium. This incredible little script
allows me to take an everyday photograph and convert it to a
creepy yet intriguing seamless background that looks nothing
like the original photo. For example, it takes this…

…and turns it into this.

I LOVE THAT ACTION!
Wish you had an action that did that? Sorry,
that is reserved for members of my website. I know, it’s yet
another shameless plug, but a guy has to eat, right? What I will
do it show you is how to get a print out of another action to
use as a personal tutorial. I have an action that makes type
look as though it was created from pipes.

To begin, make sure the Actions Palette is not
in Button Mode. To do this, click the small arrow in the upper
right corner of the Actions Palette, opening the Actions Menu.
In the List you will see ‘Button Mode’. Make sure there is no
check mark next to it. If there is, simply click Button Mode to
uncheck it and switch to Edit Mode.



Now you want to clear out all other action sets
except the one you want to print. You can do this by either
going to the menu again and clearing all actions then reloading
the one you want to work with, or simply click and drag the
extras to the trash icon at the bottom of the actions palette.


IF YOU DON"T DO THIS, then when you save the
action as a printable text file, every action in every loaded
set will be included in the saved file. This often results in
thousands of extra pages with endless commands. Ok, an
exaggeration. But it certainly will feel like a small forest was
killed when the printer goes nuts!
In order to save the action as a text file, you
need to have the SET selected in the actions palette, and not
the individual action. The set name appears at the very top of
the list. For those of you used to creating actions this should
be second nature, as actions can only be saved in sets.

You are ready to save the action. This may
require a bit of dexterity. Click and hold down the Command/CTRL
+ Alt Keys with one hand. Now open the Actions Menu again with
the mouse and select ‘Save Action’.

Now when the save dialogue box pops up, instead
of the action having a .atn file extension, it will have a .txt
extension. Name it and save it to the folder of your choice.


Now you can open the file in your favorite text
editor, Word or whatever, and have a complete, step-by-step
listing of the process to create the effect.
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