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Participant
January 28, 2015
Answered

How to fix small menus and icons on 4k display in Photoshop? [2015]

  • January 28, 2015
  • 51 replies
  • 377758 views

 

[This 7-year-old question from 2015 about CS6 and Windows 8.1 is now locked.

Please start a new thread about the current version if you have a similar question]

 

Hello,

 

So I have seen that I am not the first one to ask this question, but I have yet to find any true resolutions.  I recently bought anew laptop, a Lenovo with a 4K UHD display which I already love for so many things.  But, like a few other programs, the high resolution means the icons and menu text of PS CS6 are incredibly small, which may be alright on a TV, but on a laptop screen, it make it incredibly difficult to work.  I have tried all sorts of different approaches in Windows, such as changing the OS font sizes and icon sizes, which do indeed change everything else on the computer, but PS is still the same tiny size.  I have also increased the text size under the interface preferences to large, but with little real change.  I understand why this is happening, but I am hoping that there is some sort of workaround, beyond just bumping down my screen resolution, which defeats the whole purpose of using UHD to edit photos.  I have heard rumors of being able to code in some UI changes manually, but have found no concrete examples of how to actually do that. 

I am sure that it would not take Adobe too much time and effort to create an update to help with scaling, but they are very set on pushing forward with Creative Clound, leaving the rest of us loyal customers to the dust until we pay up.  If anyone has found any resolutions or workarounds, I'd really appreciate it.  Thank you. 

Correct answer riggitynick

This is a little late,

but for windows, I found that if you navigate to where the actual application file(.exe) is,

right-click it and select properties,

choose the compatibility tab and select "Change high dpi settings" under the settings section,

in the next window, select the checkbox that says "High DPI scaling override",

and choose "System" from the drop down.

-Hit ok to save the changes, and then re-open Photoshop(i've only tested it with photoshop and illustrator).

That fixed it for me.

 

 

 

51 replies

Participant
February 24, 2020

On a PC, anyway, have you tried simply Ctrl+ or Ctrl- to change screen resolution on the fly?

 

armandol56344260
Participant
January 10, 2020

Thank you.  That process resolved my same issue.  😄

Participant
January 9, 2020

I have a 4K monitor for about a year now and was not able to get the Photoshop 10, which is part of CS3 suite, scaling well. It took me a while to come upon your solution and it really does it job. Thanks for the great info. Regards

Participating Frequently
January 5, 2020

Worked perfectly for me, and I'm on CS5 Web Premium. Well spotted riggitynick!

marekk4143007
Participant
January 2, 2020

Thanks a lot, this worked for me.

Participant
December 24, 2019

This worked for me. I just had to select System (extended). Just System did nothing.

Known Participant
November 29, 2019

These suggestions do not work to change the size of the tools, only the menus.

Participating Frequently
November 30, 2019

your correct it doesn't do anything for the size of the cursor, like the pen tool on the screen, they need to be bigger so you can see what its doing.

Known Participant
December 7, 2019

So it turns out, after over 3 hours on the phone with Dell to resolve the issues (tiny tools and "extra large" view not working), this is a Windows 10 vs. high rez issue. Apparently MS is a bit slow in making their OS's compatible with new higher rez computers. 4k or better will create issues with Win 10 and while there are some work arounds, turns out I (and anyone who has this issue) has to reduce their screen rez. In my case, from 3840x2160 to 2048x1152 in order to keep ratios the same. This enlarges the tools and allows "extra large" image viewing to work within the resolution confines and won't distort the images I have to work with.

Participating Frequently
November 29, 2019

Go to the file location of the PS exe file. Right click it and select properties. Select the compatibility tab and change the high DPI setting. Put a check in the radio box, Override Scaling Behaver. Then select System. You will have to do that to AI & Design also. This takes care of the of the interphase size, but the pen tool is still tiny and hard to work with. I can’t take the credit for this discovery it belongs to someone else. Going into the Registry to do the changes necessary kind of scared me. But there is a Youtube video on the process if you want to go that route.

riggitynickCorrect answer
Participant
November 2, 2019

This is a little late,

but for windows, I found that if you navigate to where the actual application file(.exe) is,

right-click it and select properties,

choose the compatibility tab and select "Change high dpi settings" under the settings section,

in the next window, select the checkbox that says "High DPI scaling override",

and choose "System" from the drop down.

-Hit ok to save the changes, and then re-open Photoshop(i've only tested it with photoshop and illustrator).

That fixed it for me.

 

 

 

Known Participant
November 29, 2019

Not sure why your reply says "Correct Answer" when it's a repeat of almost everyone else's. It also doesn't fix the issue of the tools being almost microscopic; it only changes the interface/menus and icons. The actual tools on my CS6 are still borked.

lizp14560315
Participant
December 6, 2019

It worked great for me! So happy I found this solution.

urbanman2004
Participating Frequently
February 9, 2019

On YouTube, user by the name 'Mario Uranjek' suggested to do the following which offers the same intended end result:

Just go to Properties > Compatibility and check the "Override high DPI scaling behavior" And select "System (Enhanced)"

Much easier solution that anyone can do, and works like a charm for me.

Moosan
Participant
March 4, 2019

So not sure whatever happened . But easy solution that worked for me.

Edit>Preferences> General> Click >Reset All Warning Dialogs & Reset Preferences on Quit .

Restart Adobe Photoshop.

urbanman2004
Participating Frequently
March 4, 2019

After careful consideration, I ultimately felt that the solution wasn't feasible due to it resulting in the overall image in the work file that I had open appearing "fuzzy", skewing my vision of the actual representation of what I was seeing on screen so I opted to upgrade to Adobe PS CC 2017.