Adobe Acrobat Tip of the Week: Unlock the Power of OCR (Optical Character Recognition)
Ever tried copying text from a scanned document, only to realize it behaves like an image? Say hello to OCR — one of Adobe Acrobat’s most underrated but powerful features.…
Adobe Animate Tip of the Week: Smooth Your Motion with Classic Tweens
Step-by-Step: How to Use Classic Tween in Adobe Animate When to Use This: Pro Tip: Want more natural motion? Use the Ease settings in the Properties panel. A value like Ease In: 100 will start…
Adobe Animate vs. Adobe After Effects: What’s the Difference?
When it comes to creating animations and motion graphics, Adobe offers two powerful tools that often get mentioned together: Adobe Animate and Adobe After Effects. While they both bring animation to life, they…
Excel Tip of the Week: Repeat Values Every X Rows Automatically
Need to repeat a list of values every X rows without copy-pasting forever? In the below example we will use 12. How to Repeat Values Every 12 Rows Let’s say…
Illustrator Tip of the Week: Use the Shape Builder Tool to Create Custom Icons Fast
Tired of combining, subtracting, and Pathfinder-ing your way through shape chaos? Step-by-Step: How to Use the Shape Builder Tool When to Use This: Pro Tip: Turn on Smart Guides (Cmd/Ctrl +…
Premiere Pro Tip of the Week: Speed Up Edits with Ripple Delete
Premiere Pro: Ripple Delete — the fastest way to cut and close gaps without lifting a finger (well, maybe one) Step-by-Step: How to Use Ripple Delete When to Use This:…
After Effects Tip of the Week: Easily Smooth Keyframes with the Graph Editor
This week, we’ll show you how to use the Graph Editor to create buttery-smooth animations in After Effects — even if you’re just starting out. Step-by-Step: How to Smooth Keyframes…
Photoshop Tip of the Week: Use “Content-Aware Fill” to Magically Remove Unwanted Objects
What Is Content-Aware Fill? Content-Aware Fill is a powerful Photoshop feature that analyzes your image and intelligently fills in the selected area by matching the surrounding pixels. It’s like Photoshop’s…
- « Previous
- 1
- 2