Photoshop and the clipboard

D
Posted By
Debbie
Aug 7, 2003
Views
406
Replies
6
Status
Closed
Hiya

Here is a question which has bugged me for years.

When I need to open a screen grab in Photoshop, I have to do it by a roundabout way. Hit Print Screen, paste it into Paint, save it, THEN open it in Photoshop.

It would be simpler to hit Print Screen and then Edit and Paste in Photoshop – but this never works. The Paste option is always greyed out, only offering the Purge Clipboard option.

Anyone know why? This has always puzzled me.

Debs

How to Master Sharpening in Photoshop

Give your photos a professional finish with sharpening in Photoshop. Learn to enhance details, create contrast, and prepare your images for print, web, and social media.

N
nomail
Aug 7, 2003
Debbie wrote:

Here is a question which has bugged me for years.

When I need to open a screen grab in Photoshop, I have to do it by a roundabout way. Hit Print Screen, paste it into Paint, save it, THEN open it in Photoshop.

It would be simpler to hit Print Screen and then Edit and Paste in Photoshop – but this never works. The Paste option is always greyed out, only offering the Purge Clipboard option.

Anyone know why? This has always puzzled me.

I have a Macintosh, so I can’t check this, but it seems odd to me. Have you opened a new document before you try to paste?… Photoshop does not have an option "Paste to new document", so you have to open an empty document before you can paste anything. Photoshop will however suggest the correct size for this new document, based on the contents of the clipboard.


Johan W. Elzenga johan<<at>>johanfoto.nl Editor / Photographer http://www.johanfoto.nl/
G
Gummo
Aug 7, 2003
You’re correct Johan.

"Johan W. Elzenga" wrote in message

I have a Macintosh, so I can’t check this, but it seems odd to me. Have you opened a new document before you try to paste?… Photoshop does not have an option "Paste to new document", so you have to open an empty document before you can paste anything. Photoshop will however suggest the correct size for this new document, based on the contents of the clipboard.


Johan W. Elzenga johan<<at>>johanfoto.nl Editor / Photographer http://www.johanfoto.nl/
N
nomail
Aug 7, 2003
Darrel Hoffman wrote:

(What bothers me is that if you want to blow up an image so that it stays pixelated, i.e. really big pixels instead of a big blurry image, this screen-grab method is the only way. You can’t just blow up an image and say "no blurry, please"…)

Sure, you can. After reading the manual about the difference between bicubic interpolation, bilineair interpolation and nearest neighbor interpolation. Choose nearest neighbor and you’ll get a nice pixelated image.


Johan W. Elzenga johan<<at>>johanfoto.nl Editor / Photographer http://www.johanfoto.nl/
CF
Craig Flory
Aug 7, 2003
Hi Johan ; It is easy . Click Print screen on your keyboard. Then , in Photoshop, click File > New . Then click Edit > Paste and it will paste your screen capture in the new canvas you just made. You will need to flatten it .. Good luck ;
Craig Flory

"Johan W. Elzenga" wrote in message
Debbie wrote:

Here is a question which has bugged me for years.

When I need to open a screen grab in Photoshop, I have to do it by a roundabout way. Hit Print Screen, paste it into Paint, save it, THEN
open
it in Photoshop.

It would be simpler to hit Print Screen and then Edit and Paste in Photoshop – but this never works. The Paste option is always greyed
out,
only offering the Purge Clipboard option.

Anyone know why? This has always puzzled me.

I have a Macintosh, so I can’t check this, but it seems odd to me. Have you opened a new document before you try to paste?… Photoshop does not have an option "Paste to new document", so you have to open an empty document before you can paste anything. Photoshop will however suggest the correct size for this new document, based on the contents of the clipboard.


Johan W. Elzenga johan<<at>>johanfoto.nl Editor / Photographer http://www.johanfoto.nl/
N
nomail
Aug 7, 2003
Craig Flory wrote:

Hi Johan ; It is easy . Click Print screen on your keyboard. Then , in Photoshop, click File > New . Then click Edit > Paste and it will paste your screen capture in the new canvas you just made. You will need to flatten it . Good luck ;
Craig Flory

"Johan W. Elzenga" wrote in message
Debbie wrote:

Here is a question which has bugged me for years.

When I need to open a screen grab in Photoshop, I have to do it by a roundabout way. Hit Print Screen, paste it into Paint, save it, THEN open it in Photoshop.

It would be simpler to hit Print Screen and then Edit and Paste in Photoshop – but this never works. The Paste option is always greyed out, only offering the Purge Clipboard option.

Anyone know why? This has always puzzled me.

I have a Macintosh, so I can’t check this, but it seems odd to me. Have you opened a new document before you try to paste?… Photoshop does not have an option "Paste to new document", so you have to open an empty document before you can paste anything. Photoshop will however suggest the correct size for this new document, based on the contents of the clipboard.


Johan W. Elzenga johan<<at>>johanfoto.nl Editor / Photographer http://www.johanfoto.nl/

Hi Craig. I know, because I didn’t ask the question, I already answered it. That’s what happens if you don’t follow the rules and write your answer ABOVE the question in stead of below it.

A: Because that is the normal way we read, dummy.
Q: Why should you write your answer below the message you resond to?


Johan W. Elzenga johan<<at>>johanfoto.nl Editor / Photographer http://www.johanfoto.nl/
DH
Darrel Hoffman
Aug 7, 2003
(What bothers me is that if you want to blow up an image so that it stays pixelated, i.e. really big pixels instead of a big blurry image, this screen-grab method is the only way. You can’t just blow up an image and say "no blurry, please"…)

Sure, you can. After reading the manual about the difference between bicubic interpolation, bilineair interpolation and nearest neighbor interpolation. Choose nearest neighbor and you’ll get a nice pixelated image.

Hmm. Well whaddayaknow? Hey, wasn’t there somebody posting not too long ago about trying to rotate an image without
reinterpolating? This would solve that, too, wouldn’t it?

How to Improve Photoshop Performance

Learn how to optimize Photoshop for maximum speed, troubleshoot common issues, and keep your projects organized so that you can work faster than ever before!

Related Discussion Topics

Nice and short text about related topics in discussion sections