How to edit iPhoto photos in Photoshop CS3

Posted by David Chin on May 26th, 2008 in Photos

There are occasions where you will want to use an external image editing program such as Adobe Photoshop to edit or retouch images in your iPhoto collection.

I highlight two principal methods in which to do this.

Method 1 - Clicking

iPhoto does not come with any external applications defined as a default, so when you right click on an image, you will see the Edit in external editor grayed out. (It’s not grayed out in my screen capture because I had already defined Adobe Photoshop CS3 as the external application when I wrote this post).
iPhoto - Edit in external editor - grayed out by default

To enable edits in an external application, select Preferences from the iPhoto menu.
iPhoto - Select Menu > Preferences

Navigate to the General tab, and drop down the Edit photo option box. Select application, and navigate to the application of your choice. In my example, I navigated to the Applications folder, then Adobe Photoshop CS3, and then I selected the Adobe Photoshop CS3 application.
iPhoto General tab - Edit photo option

Once you’ve done that, you will see the Edit in external editor option is now available whenever you right-click on a photo in iPhoto.
iPhoto - Editing options

The Edit button (or double-clicking a photo) will now automatically launch Adobe Photoshop CS3.
iPhoto - Edit button
If you want to change this behavior and have it call up iPhoto’s edit window instead, just go back to Preferences, and select Edit photo: In main window.

Although you can save an edited image directly back to the iPhoto library, I’d advise that the image you edit in Photoshop be saved to a folder that is separate from your iPhoto library, say the Desktop.

This is because iPhoto’s help says that non-destructive edits is not guaranteed when you edit an image outside of iPhoto, although I noticed that I was still able to right-click on an image that was edited in Photoshop and saved to iPhoto, and have that photo Revert to Original.

Alternatively, to be extra safe, you might want to consider first creating a duplicate image by selecting Duplicate after a right-click on the photo, and edit that duplicate image.

Method 2 - Drag and drop

M Thomas reminds us that the way of the Mac is about drag and drop. Drag a photo from iPhoto and drop it onto the Photoshop application icon in the Dock.

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