To edit a font in Photoshop, select the type layer and use the Options bar or Character panel to change its family, size, color, and style.
Editing a font in Photoshop starts with the type layer — select it, and the Options bar and Character panel give you full control over family, size, color, and more. Whether you’re tweaking a single letter or reformatting a paragraph, the process is straightforward once you know the right panels.
Selecting the Type Layer: The First Move
To edit a font, you first need to tell Photoshop which text layer to modify. Open the Layers panel and find the layer with the T thumbnail. Double-click that thumbnail, or double-click the text directly on the canvas with the Type tool selected. If you use the Move tool, double-clicking the text also opens it for editing.
Once selected, the text becomes highlighted, and you can type new characters or apply formatting changes. If no characters are highlighted, any formatting you apply will affect the entire layer.
Editing Font in Photoshop: The Essential Controls
When a type layer is active, the Options bar near the top of the screen displays the most common font settings: family, style, size, alignment, and color. For more advanced options, use the Character panel (accessible via Window > Character). The table below summarizes the key controls and where to find them.
| Setting | Location | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Font family | Options bar or Character panel | Dropdown list of installed fonts |
| Font style (bold, italic) | Options bar or Character panel | Available if font includes styles |
| Font size | Options bar or Character panel | Choose a preset or type a custom value |
| Text color | Options bar or Character panel | Click the color swatch to open the color picker |
| Kernling / tracking | Character panel | Adjusts spacing between characters |
| Leading (line spacing) | Character panel | Sets distance between lines of text |
| Baseline shift | Character panel | Moves selected characters up or down |
| All Caps / Small Caps | Character panel | Toggle buttons; available per character |
| Superscript / subscript | Character panel | From the panel menu or toggle icons |
How Do You Change Font Family, Size, and Color?
To change the font of selected text, simply click the font family dropdown in the Options bar and pick a new typeface. For size, type a specific point size or choose from the preset list. To change color, click the color swatch next to the size field — this opens the color picker where you can select a new hue. If you want to apply these changes to the whole layer, make sure no text is selected before you adjust the controls.
For scaling text non‑destructively, use the Vertical Scale and Horizontal Scale options in the Character panel rather than Free Transform — this preserves the original point size while stretching the characters.
Fine-Tuning with the Character Panel
For typographic precision, the Character panel is your headquarters. Open it from the menu bar: Window > Character, or click the Character panel icon in the Options bar when the Type tool is active. Here you can adjust leading (line spacing), kerning (space between two characters), tracking (overall character spacing), baseline shift, and toggle All Caps or Small Caps. Adobe’s official editing text guide confirms these controls and their behaviors.
The panel also includes options for superscript, subscript, and faux bold/italic — the latter used when the font lacks a dedicated bold or italic style. Most of these adjustments can be applied to individual characters or the entire layer.
Find and Replace Text in Photoshop
If you need to replace a word or phrase across multiple text layers, use Edit > Find and Replace Text. Enter the search term, the replacement, and choose whether to search all layers or the selected one. Photoshop will walk through each match.
Working with Vertical Text and Rotation
To flip horizontal text to vertical, select the type layer and go to Layer > Type > Vertical, or click the Text Orientation button in the Options bar. For rotation, use Free Transform (Ctrl/Cmd+T) and rotate the bounding box — this applies to both point and paragraph text. If you need to un‑rotate vertical characters back to upright, the Character panel menu offers Standard Vertical Roman Alignment.
What Happens When You Convert Type to a Shape?
Converting live text to a shape (via Layer > Type > Convert to Shape) turns the letters into vector paths. You can then use the Direct Selection tool to move anchor points and reshape individual letterforms — ideal for logos or custom typography. However, this is a destructive operation: the text can no longer be edited as text. Font family, size, and style changes are locked. Only use this when you are certain the text is final.
The table below compares live type and shape editing side by side.
| Feature | Live Type | Converted to Shape |
|---|---|---|
| Edit font family | Yes | No |
| Edit font size | Yes | No |
| Edit text content | Yes | No |
| Apply character formatting | Yes | No |
| Reshape individual letters | No | Yes |
| Revert to editable text | Always | No |
| Ideal for | Body text, anything that may change | Logos, unique typography |
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Editing the wrong layer is the most frequent slip — always check the Layers panel to confirm you’ve selected a type layer. Another trap is forgetting to select characters when you only want to change part of a word; changes affect the entire layer when nothing is selected. Also, avoid using Free Transform to “change font size” — it scales the layer, not the font point size, and can lead to blurry results. Stick to the size field in the Options bar or Character panel.
Putting It All Together: The Editing Sequence
- Select the type layer in the Layers panel.
- Choose the Type tool and click the text to edit.
- Select the characters you want to modify (or leave nothing selected for layer-wide changes).
- Use the Options bar to change font family, style, size, color, and alignment.
- For advanced typography, open the Character panel (Window > Character) to adjust leading, tracking, baseline shift, and special formats.
- Commit your edit by clicking the checkmark in the Options bar or pressing Enter (on the numeric keypad) or Ctrl+Enter.
- If you need custom letter shapes, convert to shape only after finalizing the text — and remember you cannot go back.
References & Sources
- Adobe. “Edit text in Photoshop” Official Adobe documentation covering all text editing controls and workflows.
