home » graphics, photoshop, tuning

Photoshop: how to change your splash screen

» 24 July 2009post by @liquidskydesign2,212 views

english italian 

Ever wanted to change and replace your Adobe Photoshop CS* startup screen?
I did. And searched on the net for some nice procedure on how to manage it. Stumbled upon Tutorial Magazine which had a link over Drawing Clouds. I’ve followed step by step that tutorial and I recommend you to do the same if you wish to change the splash screen, it’s a great thing.

dc-art1

I’ve created mine.
But wanted something a little different; I mean, the one on the tutorial is perfect and fits fine, but I wanted something a little different than a blue cloud background.
So here I am with this little integration for all you PS modders.

Things to keep in mind:

  • the original startup has a space where credits and loading stuff go, so be sure not to draw too much things in there, unless you discard everything
  • there’s a fixed dimension to keep, don’t go for the full screen
  • there’s no absolute need to use original fonts, just use your imagination

And now, what you need before starting:

  • your registered Adobe Photoshop CS* copy
  • latest free version of TGTSoft ResEdit or ResourceHacker
  • a nice font (there are tons for free online)
  • your creativity

So let’s start.

#1 – Create and prepare a working layer
Open up a new document in your Adobe Photoshop CS* (I work with CS4) using ctrl+N, yet set the title and the name of the layer, I’m gonna call it Background, with 624*354px in dimension, 72px DPI and transparent
background.

Create a new layer

You can fill any color you want, maybe #FFF can suite for anything, use Shift+F5 to open the Fill dialog and choose the color.

Choose your color

Once you’re done, you need to reduce of some pixel the layer dimension, so use the Free Transform Tool with ctrl+T and set those values:

Set your dimension

Done?
Save it in a .psd format, for your convenience and re-use, it only takes a minute.

#2 – Adjust layer and draw!
The original startup screen has a little shadowing on the bottom and on the left, so let’s add it to our layer using the Blending Options by right clicking on the layer name pane on your bottom right.
Select the Drop Shadow option, with a drop of luck you won’t need to change the default settings:

Blending Options

So, now’s the creative part: draw something, paste an image or airbrush it like a canvas! There’s no limit on what you can do.
And here are the guidelines: in the reddish part all the scripting things will load, so keep in mind that part will be covered. In the left up corner there’s the original logo. You can design your own, make your logo or skip it clearly. I’ve reddished the logo space for your convenience.

Line field

Dummy

I’ve designed some dummy to show you how to act, the important thing you need to know is about Clipping Mask
Once your draw or image is ready, put it (paste it in case) over the current layer, right click on the image layer and select Create Clipping Mask, you’ll see it will automatically fit in. the image you choose as background, in order to fill it perfectly.

Now save your work in .png file naming the file: SPLASHARTBACKGROUND.PNG (for Cs3/4) or SPLASHARTFEATHER.PNG (for CS2) – yes, all in CAPITAL LETTERS.

#4 – Backup and tune
Before doing anything, locate your Photoshop Directory, generally it is located in %homedrive%\Program Files\Adobe\Adobe Photoshop CS.. but check to be sure of the path – mine lays in D:\Draw\Adobe\CS4\Photoshop\.. in the root directory find the PSArt.dll. Back it up, even rename it in PSArt.dll.bak and store in a safe place, that’s in order to replace the new startup in case something goes bad or in case you change your mind.

Close Photoshop and other sucking memory applications. Install ResEdit or ResourceHacker and run it.
Using ResEdit: click the Open icon and select the PSArt.dll you’ve yet located.
If you’re using Adobe Photoshop CS2 you should look for /PNGF/SPLASHARTFEATHER.PNG, while CS3/4
only needs the SPLASHARTBACKGROUND.PNG file.

With ResEdit you just need to point at %homedrive%\Program Files\TGTSoft\ResEdit\Temp and replace the image file, answer yes when the window will prompt for overriding (remember we’re working with a copy of the PSArt.dll). Go back to ResEdit and click save. You’re done!

With ResourceHacker you need to right click on the 1033 resource and then go to Replace resource.. upon the prompt box asking you to open the .png image you’ve created, select the following:

  • type: PNGF
  • name: splashartfeather.png or splashartbackground.png
  • language: 1033

Now you can save it all, restart your Photoshop and enjoy as I enjoyed mine.
As you can see it’s a piece of cake =)

LSD Screen

In case you’re missing or screwed your PSArt.dll, I can suggest DLLDLL.com for downloading.

Download PSART.ZIP Photoshop Zipped File

Like this article?
Something to ask about?
Leave a comment, then!

 

Tutti gli articoli e le immagini presenti su ./lsd sono fruibili sotto licenza copyleft e protetti da Safe Creative; le immagini di terze parti sono protette da copyright dei rispettivi detentori.

 
 
Mitsume Temo & the Round Earth Committee
 
 

  • Delicious
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Tumblr
  • Identi.ca
  • StumbleUpon
  • Slashdot
  • Posterous
  • LinkedIn
  • Google Reader
  • FriendFeed
  • Technorati
  • Mixx
  • Squidoo
  • Yahoo! Bookmarks
  • Netvibes


Commercial: BE YOURSELF
deviantART: new page look and new art
Web: le migliori estensioni di Firefox per migliorare la vita dei designer
deviantART: una nuova skin per il mio journal
WordPress: un errore da veri esperti, quello di HireWordPressExperts.com e 24365online.com

  • Leon Whitaker

    Hello!
    This tute is simply awesome, I find there is so good skill in it and like the way you're processing images.

    It is simple but effective, moreover, the startup screen you have added is simply gorgeous!

    Once again thank you for showing this great skill!
    And thank you for the tutorial :)

  • Leon Whitaker

    Hello!
    This tute is simply awesome, I find there is so good skill in it and like the way you're processing images.

    It is simple but effective, moreover, the startup screen you have added is simply gorgeous!

    Once again thank you for showing this great skill!
    And thank you for the tutorial :)

  • etherea

    Leon, thanks for your comment and I do beg your pardon if it took so long for it to be shown: my Bad Behaviour antispam plugin seems too rude sometimes =)

    Btw, this tutorial is quite simple in it but maybe not all PS users are aware they can tweak and tune it to have best performances.
    Hope this can be a little help =)

  • Daniele

    Grande, ci provo subito :)

  • etherea

    Fammi sapere come e' andata e fammi anche vedere lo sreen, sono curiosa di vedere le vostre creazioni =)