Getting your workspace ready for UI work
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Overview
Daniel Scott
Founder of Bring Your Own Laptop & Chief Instructor
instructorI discovered the world of design as an art student when I stumbled upon a lab full of green & blue iMac G3’s. My initial curiosity around using the computer to create ‘art’ developed into a full-blown passion, eventually leading me to become a digital designer and founder of Bring Your Own Laptop.
Sharing and teaching are a huge part of who I am. As a certified Adobe instructor, I've had the honor of winning multiple Adobe teaching awards at their annual MAX conference. I see Bring Your Own Laptop as the supportive community I wished for when I was first starting out and intimidated by design. Through teaching, I hope to bring others along for the ride and empower my students to bring their stories, labors of love, and art into the world.
True to my Kiwi roots, I've lived in many places, and currently, I reside in Ireland with my wife and kids.
In this video we’re going to look at re-setting your workspace. Now you’ve reset your workspace if you opened up Photoshop and it was looking different from my version and you want to get it to look the same so you can follow along. Now I’m using Photocopy CC2015. If you’re using other versions it might look slightly different. Okay, but let’s say that you’ve been using it for other things and you’ve moved these tablets around, sorry these, pallets – you’ve dragged them around or you’ve accidentally done it, and you’ve done this during the tutorial, you can come back to this video and all you need to do to get it back to normal, to make it look right is – up here it says essentials and let’s make sure its set to essentials first and then click on where it says reset essentials. That will put everything back in its place and it will look like mine for this tutorial.