![]() Instead of using an action to record a series of manual tasks, I use the action to record a skin smoothing Neural Filter. I used to do all my retouching manually using a multi-step technique called frequency separation-which I also kicked off with a shortcut key-activated Photoshop action-but the Neural Filters achieve a similar effect in an even more efficient manner. With the advent of Neural Filters, Photoshop has made skin smoothing and face retouching easier and more automatic than ever. Here’s just one of the ways I deploy actions to make my editing process faster and better. I do this-literally-with every image I edit. You can even assign a shortcut key-such as “Shift F8”-to any action so you can hit that key combo one time and the entirety of the action will proceed. ![]() And if you’d like Photoshop to prompt you to input specific values along with any step, click to check the “toggle dialog on and off” box found next to the step’s primary checkbox. And when you’re done recording, you can always toggle the steps in your action on and off by clicking the checkbox next to each step in the Actions palette. If you make a mistake during the recording process you can stop, undo, go back and restart recording at any point. You may now give your recording a name and file it away with other complementary actions. After deliberately carrying out your series of edits, click the square icon to stop recording. So when you’re ready to record a process, click record. At the bottom of the window, you’ll see a round icon that, after clicking, records every mouse click you make. To set up and record a Photoshop action, first open the Actions palette.
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