Using Adobe Photoshop to Edit Graphical Image Text
Launch Photoshop, go to File > Open and locate the "psd" folder
that came with your template package. Open the folder and select
the .psd file you want to open.
To replace text or images in the .psd you must first select the
layer that holds the item.
A shortcut to locating the appropriate layer is to Control-click
on the text you wish to modify.(Choose the Move Tool from the toolbar
and hold down the Ctrl key on your keyboard while clicking on the
text in the document.)
The Layers palette will immediately show the correct layer as highlighted
in blue.
Ctrl-clicking on an item snaps the Layers
palette to its layer.
You can click on the eyeball icon to hide
the layer if you wish to make sure it is the correct layer. Click
the eyeball icon again to show the layer once more.
You may also wish to name the layer for
future reference. To do so, right-click on the Layer's name in the
palette and choose Layer Properties from the list.
Editable text layers are marked by a T in the layers
palette. If the layer shows a yellow alert next to the T, your computer
does not yet have the font for it installed. You will need to install
the font file(s) that came with your template and then return to
Photoshop. See: How
to Install a New Font
(If the layer for the text has no T it has been rasterized,
i.e., is no longer editable with the Text tool. Click on the document
with the Text tool to create a new text layer and type in your new
text. Choose the font from the font dropdown list and choose the
color and size you want.)
Once you have located the layer the text is on and the layer is selected
in the palette, choose the text tool from the toolbar (the T icon).
Place your cursor at the beginning of the text on the screen -
the cursor will change to an I-prompt. Click and drag across the
text to select it. Then type your new text over the old. While
the text is selected, you may also change its size, as was done
here:
When you have the text image the way you want it, you will need
to save it for the web and insert it into your html web page file.
For more on saving graphics for the web, see Optimizing
Website Template File Size when Saving for Web
In most of the .psd files that come with your template you will see
paragraphs of text, known as body text:

These are included in the .psd file for you to visualize the entire
layout, but you should not save them as graphic files. This text
should be typed in the html file for the web page.
This is also the case for any forms pictured in your .psd files.
Web forms such as these need to be created in the html file, not
saved as graphics.
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