


We do that using the File Type Associations option in the Bridge Preferences. All we need to do is tell Bridge to open the file, along with all future files of the same type, into the latest version of Photoshop.

Or, if you have multiple versions of Photoshop installed (as I do), Bridge may open the image in an earlier version of Photoshop instead of in the newest version.Īs we'll see, fixing the problem is easy. But depending on the type of file you're trying to open (JPEG, PNG, TIFF, etc), you may run into a situation where Bridge opens the image not into Photoshop but into some other program that's installed on your computer. Most of the time, Adobe Bridge will open your images into Photoshop as you'd expect and without any problems. And we learned how to use Bridge to browse to our files, select the image we need, and open it into Photoshop. We learned how to install Bridge using the Creative Cloud app. To quickly recap, we learned that Adobe Bridge is a file browser that's included with every copy of Photoshop and with every Creative Cloud subscription. In the previous tutorial, we learned how to open images into Photoshop from Bridge.
