Have you used Photoshop CC 2015.5? Do you remember the Face-Aware Liquify launch? Let us know in the comments below.
Designers often struggle to identify typography used in flattened raster images. CC 2015.5 introduced Match Font, an intelligent search tool that analyzed scanned or photographed text. It cross-referenced the shapes against Typekit (now Adobe Fonts) and local system fonts to suggest the closest matches. Performance and Asset Export Enhancements
This version saw significant speed boosts for common tasks like opening files.
: Automatically fills in gaps when you rotate or expand an image beyond its original boundaries.
Warning: Do not download "Photoshop CC 20155" from crack sites. These files are often modified to contain keyloggers or ransomware. If a file claims to be "20155" with no version history, it is almost certainly a trap.
This tool allowed editors to make precise facial adjustments without distorting the surrounding background pixels. Match Font (Deep Learning Integration)
: This version refined the Artboards feature (introduced in CC 2015), allowing for faster duplication and easier exporting of multiple layouts for web and mobile design. Legacy and Availability
This AI-powered feature revolutionized portrait editing, as discussed by Photoshop Cafe . The Liquify filter gained the ability to automatically detect eyes, noses, mouths, and face shapes, allowing artists to make subtle adjustments to facial features without manual, painstaking warping.
sits in a fascinating historical slot. It was the version that perfected the traditional pixel-pushing workflow right before Adobe jumped into AI and cloud-heavy processing. For vintage digital art workflows, low-spec laptops, or simply for nostalgia, it holds value.
While Adobe has introduced advanced AI (Adobe Firefly) in later versions, 2015.5 was a turning point. It solidified the shift towards "smart" tools, decreasing the time spent on manual selections. Its reliance on user-driven input combined with AI guidance set the foundation for the automated features we see in today's Photoshop versions.