Glossary

What Is a PSD File?

A PSD file is an Adobe Photoshop Document, the program's native format for saving work in progress. Unlike a flat photo, a PSD keeps every layer, mask, adjustment, and text block separate and fully editable, so a designer can reopen it later and change any single part. That richness is also what makes the files large and tied to Photoshop.

TL;DR

PSD is Photoshop's layered, editable file. Convert it to JPG or PNG to get a flat image you can view and share anywhere.

What Is Inside a PSD File

A PSD is less a picture than a project. Open one in Photoshop and you find the building blocks still apart:
  • Layers: each element on its own, stacked to form the final image.
  • Masks and adjustments: non-destructive edits you can dial back at any time.
  • Smart objects and text: vector and type that stay sharp and re-editable.

A PSD can reach 2 GB and 30,000 pixels on a side. For anything bigger, Photoshop switches to the related PSB, the Large Document format, which holds the same layered data without that ceiling.

Why You Cannot Just Share a PSD

A PSD is built for editing, not viewing. Most people have no Photoshop to open it, web pages will not display it, and the layered structure carries far more data than a finished image needs. To hand the picture to someone, you flatten it into a standard format first.

Converting a PSD to JPG or PNG merges the layers into one flat image. Keep the original PSD if you may need to edit later, because the separate layers cannot be recovered from the flattened copy.

How to Convert a PSD File

A batch converter flattens and exports a folder of PSD files to JPG or PNG in one pass, so you get shareable images without opening each one in Photoshop.

What you'll need
  • Batch Picture Resizer: converts PSD files to flat JPG or PNG images on Windows
  • A Windows PC, version 10 or 11
  • The PSD files you want to convert

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