Open full-size PSDs, create sophisticated composites, retouch images, and control brushes with your finger or Apple Pencil. I suspect the Samples folder was installed by default when you installed PS and IR, but could have been omitted with a Custom Install of those apps. The creative power of Photoshop is now on your iPad. your Documents folder, in case you need them again, before trashing the Droplets folder and then restarting your Mac. You could simply trash the Droplets folder cited above, then restart your Mac.Ī more conservative approach - and the one I would use - would be toĬreate an Archive of the Droplets folder and save that somewhere, e.g. They're basically samples of how one can automate repetitive tasks in those applications and save the sequence of actions as a droplet so one can merely drop an image on the droplet to perform the actions specified in the droplet. I suspect you'd find a similar folder in your PS CS2 folder within Applications. The last version of ImageReady was CS2, and dates from January 2008 The application started out as a freebie to Adobe Photoshop, but was very soon hauled into. With subfolders therein for Photoshop Droplets and ImageReady Droplets. According to TechSpot, Adobe released Photoshop CS2 as a legacy version for free.
#PHOTOSHOP IMAGEREADY CS2 FOR FREE#
Since Adobe Photoshop has to be purchased, the only version I know that you can get for free is Photoshop CS2. Applications/Adobe Photoshop 7/Samples/Droplets When Adobe Photoshop Creative Suite 3 came, Adobe ImageReady was discontinued. On my version of Photoshop they reside in the folder This is controlled by Launch Services, which identifies the apps that can open a specific type of file. Since they're executable files that can open images, they appear in the Open With list for any image. exe files are Photoshop and ImageReady Droplets.