Mini Bridge In Photoshop CS5

With the release of Photoshop CS5, Bridge is a separate program, but Adobe has introduced a new feature known as Mini Bridge, a new panel in Photoshop that acts like a window between Photoshop and Bridge, allowing us to view and access our images in Bridge without needing to switch to it. With Mini Bridge, we can navigate to the folder that contains the images we need, preview all the images in the folder, and open the ones we want without ever leaving Photoshop. Of course, the word "Mini" in its name is a clue that Mini Bridge was not meant as a replacement for the full version of Bridge. There are many advanced features in Adobe Bridge CS5, like rating and labeling photos and adding them to collections, that are not available in Mini Bridge. But for simply locating, previewing and opening images, the new Mini Bridge saves time.

Opening Mini Bridge There are several different ways to open Mini Bridge. If you have some time to kill, you can go up to the File menu at the top of the screen and choose the new Browse in Mini Bridge command:

Or, you can go up to the Window menu, choose Extensions, and then choose Mini Bridge:

If you’d rather not take the scenic route, a faster way to open Mini Bridge is by clicking on the new Mini Bridge icon in the Application Bar at the top of the screen. You’ll find it sitting beside the main Adobe Bridge icon:

Or, if the Mini Bridge panel is collapsed on your screen, simply click on its panel icon to open it:

The Mini Bridge Home Page Whichever way you choose to access it, Mini Bridge will open in the panel column along the right side of the screen:

You can return to this page any time if you need to by clicking on the Home Page icon (the small house) in the row of icons along the top:

Browsing Files To browse through the files and folders on your computer, click on the Browse Files button. For Mini Bridge to work, we need to have the full Adobe Bridge CS5 program open and running in the background, but by default, Mini Bridge will open it automatically when we click the Browse Files button if it’s not open already:

There are several ways to browse and navigate through your images using Mini Bridge. For example, try using the 'Computer,' 'Home,' 'Desktop,' 'Documents,' and 'Pictures' folders in the Navigation pane on the left. This is just like navigating through folders on your hard drive. Another way to navigate through your images is to make use of Favorites, also seen over on the left. To add a folder to your Favorites, simply right-click on it and choose Add To Favorites.

Once you choose a folder that you'd like to browse, you can increase or decrease the size of the image thumbnails by dragging on the slider at the bottom of the panel. You can change how Mini Bridge will preview images by using the menus in the bottom right corner.

Once you find an image that you'd like to open in Photoshop, simply double-clicking on it will get the job done!

Another option is the ability to search for images. Clicking on the Magnifying glass in the top right corner will open a search box, which you can use to find images quickly. This comes in handy, especially when you forget where you've saved certain images.

Customizing Mini Bridge

By default, the Content Pod is a little too small to be of much use, but there are some easy ways to customize the look of Mini Bridge and make it more useful. First, we can expand the size of the panel by clicking on any of its borders and dragging them outward. I’ll drag out the left and bottom of Mini Bridge to make the panel larger. As the panel expands, so does the Content Pod, allowing us to see more of our images.

We can also drag the dividing bar between the pods to change the amount of space that each pod is given inside the Mini Bridge panel. Click on the bar between the Navigation and Content Pods and drag it upward to give more room to the Content Pod.

The thumbnails are also a little too small to work with, but we can increase their size by dragging the thumbnail slider along the bottom of the Mini Bridge panel. The further you drag the slider towards the right, the larger the thumbnails appear:

Notice how, after increasing their size, the thumbnails in the bottom row are now too large to fit entirely within the Content Pod? If that bothers you, click on the View icon in the bottom right corner of Mini Bridge and select Grid Lock from the menu.

This places the thumbnails inside a grid that limits their size so that as you drag the slider, the thumbnails will jump to the next available size that still allows them to fit entirely within the Content Pod rather than being partially cut off. To switch back to the normal view, click again on the View icon and then on Grid Lock to deselect it.

By default, we scroll through the thumbnails in the Content Pod to view them all, but Mini Bridge also lets us view them as pages. Click again on the View icon in the bottom right corner and select Show Items in Pages from the top of the menu.

Now, rather than having the thumbnails appear as a long list to scroll through, they appear as a collection of pages that we can easily move forward and back through by clicking on the left and right arrows in the bottom right corner of the Content Pod. The number of pages will depend on how many images are in the folder and the size of the thumbnails. To switch back to the scrollable thumbnail list, click again on the View menu and then on Show Items in Pages to deselect it. To make more room you can also turn off the file names.

Content Layouts

The full version of Adobe Bridge gives us four different layouts for how the thumbnails appear in the Content Panel and what information is displayed along with them, and Mini Bridge gives us access to these exact same layouts for the Content Pod. If we click again on the View icon, we see the four layouts listed at the bottom of the menu – As Thumbnails, As Filmstrip, As Details, and As List. The default layout is As Thumbnails, which is what we’ve seen so far, but I’ll click on As Filmstrip to select it: Thumbnails appear in a single row that scrolls.

The As Details layout will display the thumbnails along with information about them, like the date they were taken, the file size, file type, and so on. The As List layout will display them as a simple list, similar to how they would appear if you were viewing the contents of the folder with your computer’s operating system.

Previewing Images

Directly to the left of the View icon is the Preview icon. Click on a thumbnail that you want to see a larger preview of, then click on the Preview icon.

You can also access the Preview command by pressing Shift+Spacebar if you prefer keyboard shortcuts. Either way, the Content Pod will temporarily be replaced with a larger version of the image, filling up as much of the space as possible. Click the Close button in the bottom right corner to close the preview and switch back to the normal Content Pod view.

Clicking on the small arrow to the right of the Preview icon will open a menu with additional options for previewing images (Slideshow, Review Mode and Full Screen Preview), all of which are brought over from the full version of Adobe Bridge. Click on any of them in the list to select them, or click anywhere outside of the menu to close it.

Selecting, Filtering And Sorting The Images

In the top right corner of the Content Pod are some options for selecting, filtering, and sorting the images. Starting from left to right, the Select icon gives us standard options for selecting and deselecting images and for showing or hiding certain files. Next is the Filter icon, which lets us show or hide images based on the star rating or label we applied to them using the full version of Adobe Bridge.

By default, Mini Bridge sorts the images inside the Content Pod based on filename, but click on the Sort icon to bring up a menu with lots of other ways to sort them, including by file type, size, date created, and so on. Uncheck the Ascending Order option at the top of the menu if you’d prefer to view them in descending order. The fourth and final icon in the Content Pod is the Tools icon, which has nothing to do with selecting, filtering or sorting images. Clicking on it gives us access to several of Photoshop’s powerful features like Photomerge and Merge to HDR Pro, which is also new in Photoshop CS5.

Navigating Through Folders

In the top left corner of Mini Bridge, above the Navigation Pod, are some options that help us navigate easily through the folders on our computer. Use the Browse buttons to move back and forth through your folder browsing history, just as you would in your favorite web browser.

The icon to the right of the Browse buttons lets us quickly jump to any parent folder, or to any recently viewed folder or file. It also gives us another way to access our Favorites.

The Path Bar

One of the most helpful navigation tools in Mini Bridge, as well as in the full version of Adobe Bridge, is the Path Bar which runs along the top just above the Navigation Pod. The Path Bar shows us the complete path to our currently selected folder. For example, reading it from right to left, it’s showing me that I’m currently viewing my Beach folder, which is inside my Places folder, which is inside my Pictures folder, and so on. Not only does the Path Bar display this information, but we can use it to jump instantly to any folder listed in the path simply by clicking on its name:

If, for some reason, you’d rather not view the Path Bar, click on the Panel View icon in the top right of Mini Bridge, then click on Path Bar to deselect it. Click it again later to turn it back on. You can also choose to show or hide the Navigation Pod and Preview Pod from here. We haven’t seen the Preview Pod yet since it’s turned off by default, so I’ll select it from the list: