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Home >> Photoshop Tutorials >> Web >> Page 2 >> Save For Web's Secrets

Since its introduction with Photoshop 5.5, Save for Web has become an indispensable part of the workflow for many of us who prepare images for the Web. Yet there are three aspects of Save for Web that seem to have been overlooked by many.

Save for Web allows you to see how your image will appear when viewed with various browsers and with different operating systems. Rather than having to transfer the image to another computer to see what the Mac or Windows folks will see, you can simulate in Save for Web. And because there are differences in how browsers display images, Save for Web allows you to actually open the image being optimized right in any browser that you have installed on your computer.

#1 THE PREVIEW MENU
Located near the top of the Save for Web window, this menu holds three sets of options. When you're in 2-up or 4-up views, these settings are applied only to the currently-active pane in the window.

The first choice is whether or not to view the optimization preview with Browser Dither. Browser Dither simulates the look of the image when viewed on a computer whose monitor is set to 8-bit color. This is rare these days, with the vast majority of people on the Web surfing with monitors set to at least thousands of colors.

However, some older laptops with screens limited to 256 colors are still in use. Browser Dither is active when a checkmark is shown next to it in the menu.

Next is a group of options that controls how you preview colors in the Save for Web window's active pane. Uncompensated color is exactly that – the color values in the file are presented to you as they are, to be viewed with your monitor settings. The Standard Windows Color and Standard Macintosh Color choices show the often-substantial difference in gamma (brightness) between the two systems.

The relative darkness of the Windows platform, or if you prefer, the relative lightness of the Macintosh platform, is evident when the shadow areas of the images are compared head-to-head.

When an image is color managed (that is, a color profile has been embedded in the image), Save for Web allows you to optimize with that profile. Select the option Use Document Color Profile.

All-in-all, it is certainly worthwhile to at least preview how your image will look on both major platforms. Generally speaking, though, using the image's color profile is perhaps your best choice.

#2 THE SELECT BROWSER MENU
Just as you can take a look at the difference between Macintosh and Windows gamma, so to can you preview how your image will differ when viewed in Internet Explorer and Netscape Navigator. Use the menu at the bottom of the Save for Web window to select the browser with which you want to preview.

The browser will actually launch and you'll see the image in the browser's window. In addition, both Internet Explorer and Netscape Navigator windows will show the file optimization information.

The choice of Other allows you to navigate on your available drives and disks to find a browser that's not listed. When you installed Photoshop and ImageReady, the installer took a quick look around your hard drive and located all of the available Web browsers to add them to the list. If you've changed or added Web browsers since, you can include them. To add a browser to the menu, simply add an alias (shortcut) for the browser into the folder Helpers> Preview In, which is found inside your Photoshop folder. (And here's a little tip: You can put a shortcut of your Web design program in the Helpers> Preview In folder, too.)

#3 THE SAVE FOR WEB PREFERENCES
When Photoshop starts acting up, when things don't seem to be working right, the first step is usually to replace the preferences file. However, when Save for Web starts misbehaving, that won't do you a bit of good. Save for Web, as if it was actually a separate program, creates its own preferences. For Photoshop 6 on the Mac, you'll find that file inside the System folder's Preferences folder, with the name Adobe Save for Web 2.0 Prefs. Photoshop 5.5 users on the Mac will find Adobe Save for Web 1.0 Prefs inside the same folder, not with the Photoshop settings. (Note: If you use Adobe Illustrator 9, be aware that its version of Save for Web creates a separate set of preferences, which are stored inside the same folder as the Illustrator preferences file. That version is called Adobe Save for Web AI 1.0 Prefs.)

On the Windows side, things aren't so easy. In order to maintain the "Windows compliant" label, Adobe must have Save for Web (and ImageReady) write preferences to the Windows Registry file. Editing this file can lead to serious problems with your system. However, if it is necessary, here are two pieces of advice: First, before you do anything else, make a copy of the Registry and save it in a safe place. Second, refer to the documentation (Help) for your version of Windows before attempting to edit the file.

 

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