There is no "right or wrong" as such, you can always say it is your "artistic vision" to do things in a certain way, but there are some things in retouching that are a good practice and help you to speed up the process. It's fine if you have time to spend however long you want on each file, but...
Always have that checked. It will be no different in CC. I'll just go for it. I don't think I have much choice. Besides most of my work is manual so I doubt I'll use many of the new gimmicky features (I could be wrong here though :)).
Thank you.
I'm going in the opposite way to the OP. Resisted moving to CC for years, but as I do more and more PS work, I feel like I'm missing out on the latest features and giving my competition the edge. I am worried that if I change my mind and want to go back to CS6 all my newest work...
I never sharpen anything until the end. How can you know what to sharpen and by how much if you still working on the file. I work mostly on studio shots (beauty, glamour, etc.) so I don't have to play with noise reduction.
In RAW converter it is all about the basics, exposure, shadows...
Talking about going back to CS6, I was on Adobe technical chat yesterday and they claim all PSDs created under Photoshop CC won't work under CS6 or any other older PS. They say it is not even possible to open them. Could you confirm that for me please as it is a bit of deal breaker for me.
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