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claraiskn
Participant
December 6, 2016
Answered

.ai and .psd preview on Windows 10

  • December 6, 2016
  • 21 replies
  • 136541 views

Hello,

I'm currently using a Mac but i will soon be working on PC: I was wondering if it was possible to previex the .psd and .ai files directly in the file explorer of Windows 10, without having to open them in Photoshop or Illustrator (as we can be done on OSX thanks to the spacebar)? It would be a great time saver!

Thank you,

Clara

Correct answer Ton Frederiks

You can always use Adobe Bridge to accurately preview these files.

21 replies

NathanOdellin
Known Participant
September 6, 2021

It's frankly ridiculous that this is even a question in 2021, but I feel your pain. Beyond ludicrous that I have to open an application just to be able to see what my file is. 

 

There are a few mentions of 3rd party apps out there for windows that allow space bar quick look functionality. I use one called SEER and I highly recommend. Just google Seer windows 10. Costs about $12 for the full version. 

 

It's way more powerful than the Mac OS quick look and it works great. But yeah, this still means you have to use it in order to see what your file is. Why on earth no one at Windows thinks being able to see what your file looks like is even vaguely a neccessity, beggars belief. 

Participant
September 7, 2021
Thank you. I'll take a look.
Inspiring
August 29, 2021

Why would it be Window's responsibility to preview Adobe files? If Windows 10 had to preview every file extension that hit the market, it's dev team wouldn't do much else quite frankly.

The fact that there are no previews of Adobe apps in Windows 10 speaks volumes about the company culture of their lack of detail. That thumbs cannot be viewed natively in Windows Explorer has been a complain by so many users for a such a long long time! This is so essential for any workflow. I do use bridge now and again, but the way it displays icons is so awefull and weird, that I really dont like using Bridge at all. Also, the text in Bridge is super small. Even if you change if to large in preferences, it's still much too small (very bad for Accessibility - Adobe should know better to be Accessibility Friendly).  

Anyway, in the meantime Windows users are left stranded using half baked and urealiable third party apps like sage & co or use Bridge and ruin your eyes. 

Lack of previews is really something that should finally be addressed by Adobe. Either they get their own team to do it, or they send a team to Redmond and start negotiated a solution with Microsoft. But sticking your head in the sand and pretending all is good is pretty childish. 

That's my opinion. 

NetHawk
Known Participant
August 30, 2021

Why Windows should handle the previews? Because MacOs does ist, too. Not only that. Windows handles previews of all kind of things. From all the office files (I know, it's the same company, but it's not Office that makes the previews happen, it's the operating system beneath), many file types from camera manufacturers, many image types and the list goes on an on. All right, Adobe too could take some action (they did it in the past, but deliberately canceled the previews many years ago). If Windows would be such a great OS, it wouldn't let users alone with that. Again: it works perfectly under MacOS. If Apple can do it, Microsoft can do it too.

Jonas DK
Known Participant
October 3, 2022

All other amswers in this thread in INCORRECT. 
1. Bridge is a wrong answer as it does NOT open from within Windows 10 
2. Sage thumbs is not the right option and and many limitations

The ONLY solution (and I have tried them all) is PSD CODEC (http://www.ardfry.com/psd-codec/)

That will preview AI and PSD and everything else from with Windows 10 explorer.

THIS is the ONLY correct answer. Cheers 🙂

*** Rig: Win10 Pro. 64 RAM. RTX 2080 Ti. Intel i9 9900k. 4K monitor. Lastest updates. Lastest drivers. ***
Participant
November 16, 2020

For someone who doesn't have tons of RAM, adding more adobe apps isn't always the first solution.

Participant
October 22, 2020

There is an amazing app in the windows store call "QuickLook". It gives windows a very similar function of quickly previewing with spacebar. Life changing on windows!

Inspiring
October 22, 2020

That is true.  I've been using it for a year or so now and it is absolutely life changing.  I can remember when Quick Look first appeared on MacOS way back in the early 2000's.  I thought, Surely, Microsoft is going to copy this feature because this is simply the most amazing thing.  But nope!  Never.  In fact, Microsoft proceeded to make Windows less visually functional in terms of viewing images.  Windows 10 got rid of the preview pane that was on the bottom that made it easier to view a decent size image at the bottom of the Explorer window.  They moved it to the right side, but that is a terrible place to put it since it forces you to use a much bigger Explorer window.  There's another app called oldnewexplorer that actually puts the preview pane back on the bottom, just like it was in Windows 7.  I've been using that for years and it works great.  MacOS is just a million times better than Windows when it comes to being able to just view images and file types.  I'm also using SageThumbs to "help out" with viewing file types but it is completely hit and miss. You never know what it will view and what it won't.  If I have a folder full of Illustrator files, it will view some of them, some of the time and not others.  But the next day it might view other files and not the ones from the day before.  So it's a real mess on Windows.  I don't understand why Microsoft won't solve it.

williamv51711697
Participant
June 15, 2020

I have never been able to view ai files as preview thumbs and have tried everything under the sun.  Sage thumbs dont work, nothing works.  Its a problem I have had for years.  I know you can use bridge but sometimes that takes too much time and is only folder specific.  Say I want to do a search for an image but not sure where its at.  I get my results, all the images show as preview thumbs but not AI files.  Its a problem Adobe has had for a long time and I have yet to get accurate info on how to do it.  I am an artist-specialise in metal work.  So if I want to do a search for "tribal" images I get a ton of results through years of collecting files-all the images except AI show as preview thumbs.  Nothing I do can change that and I have tried everything.

 

Participant
April 18, 2020

It is very helpful. Thank you thanks a lot dear.

Inspiring
April 18, 2020

When OS X first came out, I thought to myself that Windows would surely have a similar overhaul and become amazing like OS X, but it never happened.  Quick Look was and is among the greatest things ever for people who deal with graphics.  Why Microsoft doesn't  respond to this is hard to understand. But, there are a couple things that are available to try.  There is a free app called Quick Look which you can download from the Windows store which does exactly what Quick Look does, just not nearly as elegantly.  select a file, press spacebar and it will enlarge and become visible just like on a Mac.  But it has one flaw.  If you are typing two words and you press the spacebar in between, Quick Look will attempt to show the file that is selected.  It's a small price to pay.  I would rate Quick Look on Windows as 8 out of 10 with regard to how well it works.  The next thing to "try" is Sage Thumbs to show the actual thumbs of Photoshop, Illustrator, and Acrobat files.  Sometimes it works and sometimes doesn't.  Some thumbs may be visible and others won't.  Some thumbs may appear after some time, or not.  It's a 4 out of 10 in terms of how well it works.  It's free though.  There's another solution which is not free.  I can't remember the name of it at the moment, but it is also a 4 out of 10 in terms of reliability, plus it wants you to continuously pay for updates.  This situation will remain sad until Microsoft understands that people use PCs for more than Word and Excel.

NetHawk
Known Participant
October 22, 2020

I tried Mystic Thumbs.  It worked about as well as SageThumbs.  Sometimes it worked and sometimes it didn't.  And I had to buy it over and over because of how the licensing works.  Basically, you'll keep pooring money into it.  After I payed for it 3 times, I just stopped using it.  Like I said, it didn't work any better than SageThumbs anyway.  I suspect that a part of the problems might be the inherent lack of quality of Windows itself.


Strange, because the version I bought is years old and works with all new Illustrator files. But also all other formats are displayed without any problems. SageThumbs does support less file formats, that's why I never tried it. Next time you encounter a file that Sage Thumbs (and/or) MysticThumbs can't display, you might consider to make it available to the community. Maybe there's a specific problem in your environment (or I might learn where the limit of Mystic Thumbs is). However, Quick Look would not be a solution for me, I need to see all the file previews at once to help me pick the one I'm looking for. Hitting the space bar for every file just doesn't cut it for me.

Participant
February 7, 2020

Hi, I am not able to preview either .ai or .psd.  Is there a setting that I am missing?

NetHawk
Known Participant
February 10, 2020

What have you tried so far? Did you install SageThumbs oder Mystic Thumbs? If not, you won't see a preview (icon) under any Windows version. If you have installed one of these tools, which one? The default settings of Mystic thumbs show you previews of .ai and .psd files by default and I assume SageThumbs does this as well.

Linda.R.Smith
Known Participant
February 26, 2020

NetHawk, Re MysticThumbs: https://mysticcoder.net/MysticThumbs What about InDesign and other adobe software? Do you see all thumbnail from other formats when toggleing through placing or viewing like you can on a Mac? Do you feel the software is safe? I work on a governrment PC and cannot find the origin of SageThumbs.  

Participant
October 25, 2018

Back in my pre-retirement programming days I created previews for all of our products that would work on Windows.  Why doesn't Adobe supply a previewer with their products?

Participant
January 12, 2020

Because it is the responsibility of Windows, for example, apple has support for everything, but windows does not.

NetHawk
Known Participant
January 25, 2020

I also think, that this is in the responsibility of Windows, however, Acrobat does provide previews/thumbnails for PDF files (although, you have to turn it on first - by default it's off). So if Microsoft isn't going to solve this, it falls back on the software provider to make their users happy. In the meantime I use Mystic Thumbs, it is an alternative to SageThumbs, which is mentionned above. But on directories with 1000+ files it consumes quite a bit of your pc resources to create the thumbnails. Once they are done, they're cached however.

MichaelStephens
Legend
December 6, 2016

I use SageThumbs to preview ai and psd files directly in Windows Explorer. You'll also have to download and install ghostscript as well, but there is a segment further down on the page specifically about which version you need.

claraiskn
claraisknAuthor
Participant
December 7, 2016

Okay, I'll try this. Thanks a lot for your help!

Ton Frederiks
Community Expert
Ton FrederiksCommunity ExpertCorrect answer
Community Expert
December 6, 2016

You can always use Adobe Bridge to accurately preview these files.

stefanim10184246
Participating Frequently
May 29, 2022

Great! Thank you for the tip.