Hide Photoshop with Screen Modes and Interface Tricks
Learn how to use Photoshop's screen modes and other tricks to hide the Photoshop interface and see more of your image as you work.
Download the PDF: Hide Photoshop with Screen Modes and Interface Tricks
Wish there was a way to see less of Photoshop’s interface and more of your image? In this tutorial, you learn how to take advantage of Photoshop’s screen modes, along with some some simple keyboard tricks, to hide the toolbar, the Options Bar, the panels and more.
I even show you how to work in Photoshop’s Full Screen Mode which hides the interface completely, allowing your image to take up the entire screen. You learn how to show just the interface elements you need, and then how to exit Full Screen Mode and return to the standard interface.
Which Photoshop version do I need?
I'm using Photoshop 2024 but everything we'll cover in this tutorial works with any recent version.
Let's get started!
The document setup
To follow along, go ahead and open any image in Photoshop.
I’ll use this image from Adobe Stock.
Hide Photoshop’s interface from the keyboard
Let’s start with the keyboard shortcuts you can use to hide parts of Photoshop’s interface as you work.
Here’s a quick summary of the shortcuts:
- Press Tab (on both Windows and Mac) to hide Photoshop’s toolbar, Options Bar and panels.
- Press Shift+Tab (Windows and Mac) to hide just the panels along the right.
- Press the shortcut again to show those interface elements.
Tip: To take advantage of the extra screen space, hold the spacebar on your keyboard to temporarily access Photoshop’s Hand Tool and reposition your image.
In this screenshot, the toolbar along the left, the Options Bar at the top and the panels along the right are all hidden after pressing Tab. Pressing Tab again would bring them back.
And here, the panels along the right are hidden (the toolbar and Options Bar remain visible) after pressing Shift+Tab. Press Shift+Tab again to show the panels.
Using Photoshop’s screen modes to hide the interface
Photoshop also includes three screen modes that change the visibility of the interface:
- Standard Screen Mode
- Full Screen Mode With Menu Bar
- Full Screen Mode
Standard Screen Mode is the default mode and displays the entire interface. The opposite is Full Screen Mode which hides the interface completely, while Full Screen Mode With Menu Bar falls somewhere in between.
Where to find the screen modes
Photoshop’s screen modes can be accessed from the Menu Bar, the toolbar or by using a keyboard shortcut.
In the Menu Bar, go to View > Screen Mode to switch between Standard, Full Screen With Menu Bar and Full Screen.
Or in the toolbar, press and hold the Screen Mode icon (at the bottom) to choose a screen mode from the menu.
Notice that all three screen modes share the letter F as their keyboard shortcut, so you can cycle between them from the keyboard.
Tip: To cycle backwards through the screen modes from your keyboard, press Shift+F.
Standard Screen Mode
In Standard Screen Mode (the default mode), Photoshop’s entire interface is visible. This includes:
- the toolbar on the left,
- the Menu Bar along the top,
- the Options Bar below the Menu Bar, and
- the panels along the right.
Standard Screen Mode also includes interface elements related to the document window itself, including:
- the tab area above the image,
- the scroll bars on the right and bottom of the image, and
- the Status Area in the lower left corner (which shows information about the document).
Full Screen Mode With Menu Bar
In Full Screen Mode With Menu Bar, all of the interface elements related to the document window itself disappear:
- the tab area,
- the scroll bars, and
- the Status Area
But the main interface elements (the toolbar, Menu Bar, Options Bar and panels) remain. Again you can take advantage of the extra space by holding the spacebar to access the Hand Tool and dragging your image to reposition it.
Full Screen Mode
In Full Screen Mode, Photoshop’s interface is hidden completely, allowing your image to take up the entire screen.
But when you select Full Screen Mode either from the Menu Bar or the toolbar, Photoshop may first display a warning that the interface will be hidden. Since that’s what we want, click the Full Screen button to accept it.
Then in Full Screen Mode, hold the spacebar to access the Hand Tool and drag your image to reposition it.
How to access Photoshop’s interface in Full Screen Mode
Even in Full Screen Mode, it’s easy to access the interface from the keyboard when you need it.
- Press Tab to show the toolbar, the Options Bar and the panels.
- Press Shift+Tab to show just the panels along the right.
- Press the shortcut again to hide the interface.
Also in Full Screen Mode, if you hover your mouse cursor near the left edge of the screen, you’ll show the toolbar so you can switch to a different tool. Then move away from the edge to hide the toolbar.
Or hover your cursor near the right edge of the screen to show the panels. Then move away from the edge to hide them.
How to cycle through open documents in Full Screen Mode
If you have multiple documents open in Photoshop, you can cycle through them from the keyboard.
- Press Ctrl+Tab to cycle forward from one document to the next.
- Press Ctrl+Shift+Tab to cycle backwards through your documents.
How to exit Full Screen Mode
To exit Full Screen Mode and return to Standard Screen Mode, you can either:
- press the Esc key, or
- press F.
How to jump straight to Full Screen Mode from Standard Mode
Finally, you can jump directly from Standard Screen Mode to Full Screen Mode from your keyboard, without needing to go through Full Screen Mode With Menu Bar to get there.
- In Standard Screen Mode, press Shift+F to jump to Full Screen Mode.
- Then in Full Screen Mode, press F to jump back to Standard Screen Mode.
And there we have it! That’s how to view all, some or none of the interface using screen modes and keyboard tricks in Photoshop.
Related tutorials:
- Getting to know the Photoshop interface
- How to zoom and pan images in Photoshop
- Managing panels in Photoshop
Don't forget, all of my Photoshop tutorials are now available to download as PDFs!