Next you have the font style and font size settings, followed by the anti-aliasing options. If you know the font you are looking for, click in the font name field, type the first few letters unique to the font name, and it should appear straight away. Plus, you will see a WYSIWYG view of the font menu list (see the example shown in Figure 3). The font name is displayed next and if you mouse down on the arrow next to this, you can choose from any available font that's loaded on your computer. You can click on the second button along to toggle switching the type orientation from horizontal to vertical. From left to right, the Type Options allow you to choose a saved type tool preset. When the type tool is selected you will see the Type Options bar shown in Figure 2. Multilingual spell checking is available and the small type buttons at the bottom enable you to quickly modify the text to create additional type styles, especially, the ability to add Faux Bold and Faux Italics when a font does not have these styles available.įigure 1 The Character and Character Style panels. You have access to leading, tracking and baseline shift. The Character panel provides controls over the type character settings and provides a level of character control that is comparable to InDesign's text handling.
![photoshop typetool baseline photoshop typetool baseline](https://i.stack.imgur.com/SyC3w.png)
![photoshop typetool baseline photoshop typetool baseline](http://webdesigntutsplus.s3.amazonaws.com/tuts/362_psd_baseline_grid/images/photoshop9.jpg)
To do this, just click on the New character style button at the bottom of the panel. If you want, you can use the Character Styles panel to save specific charcater panel settings as a saved style. The Character panel can be used to edit the individual character settings. The type tool character settings can all be controlled via the Character and Character Styles panels (Figure 1) and also the Options bar (shown in Figure 2).