May 05, 2014 A friend of mine just bought a new Win7 system and is trying to install her filters. She is having a hard time getting FU2 to install and asked for help. I looked back on my install book when I got my Win7 in 2011 and saw that I had trouble installing Filters Unlimited 2.
I had Filter Forge V6 & V7 installed and working under PaintShop Pro 2018, 2019, and earlier versions of PSP (X2, X5, X9, X10, X11), for both 32b and 64b versions of PSP. I finally decided to uninstall all versions of PSP older than PSP 2018 & 2019. Now, when I launch the Filter Forge plugin, I receive the following error from PSP: 'Unable to load the requested plug-in filter. The plug-in may not be installed properly or may be missing files. (Plugin: Filter Forge 6.8bf)'. The message is repeated for FF V7, with only the filter name changed (to Filter Forge 7.8bf). I uninstalled and reinstalled FF V6 & V7, and got the same results. I uninstalled and reinstalled PSP 2018, 2019, then FF V6/7, and got the same results. 32b and 64b versions of PSP and FF were installed. I also ensured the FF plug-ins were referenced properly in PSP File Locations settings. The stand-alone FF program for V6 & V7 still work properly. Anyone have any thoughts as to what might be going on? Also, how can FF be uninstalled completely, so that when I reinstall, I have to supply the license key? When I uninstalled and reinstalled FF, it never asked for the license key, so that tells me that not all FF related files or registry entries were removed. If I can get a clean 'new' FF installation and the problem persists, then I have another data point that it might be an issue with the host program. (I reinstalled PSP X8 and the FF plugin still does not work.)
Learn how you can migrate presets, actions, plug-ins, preferences, and settings while upgrading to a new version of Photoshop or installing Photoshop on a different computer.
Presets are collections of items and values that are applied to artwork in Photoshop. You can save and load presets, or replace them with custom values at any time. Actions, brushes, and keyboard shortcuts are examples of presets. Photoshop comes with presets, but you can also create your own.
Settings are actual values that are currently loaded in Photoshop. They control various elements and tools in the application, such as your current brush and all its values.
Actions are series of tasks that you play back on a single file or a batch of files—menu commands, panel options, tool actions, and so on. For example, an action can change the size of an image, apply an effect to that image, and then saves the file in the desired format.
You can migrate your custom preset collections, as well as some Photoshop presets, from one version of Photoshop to another on the same computer. The presets you can migrate include:
Actions
Brushes
Black and White (Adjustment)
Channel Mixer (Adjustment)
Color Range
Color Swatches
Contours
Curves (Adjustment)
Custom Shapes
Doutone (Mono, Duo, Tri, Quad)
Exposure (Adjustment)
Gradients
HDR Toning (Adjustment)
Hue and Saturation (Adjustment)
Keyboard Shortcuts
Levels (Adjustment)
Lighting Effects
Lights (3D)
Materials (3D)
Menu Customization
Patterns
Render Settings (3D)
Repousse (3D)
Selective Color (Adjustment)
Styles
Tools
Volumes (3D)
By default, when you update to the latest version of Photoshop using the Creative Cloud desktop app, your presets, settings, and preferences are migrated from the earlier version of Photoshop. Also, when you launch Photoshop for the first time, you're prompted to migrate all available presets from the most recent version of Photoshop installed on your computer.
Presets can be migrated from the latest version installed before Photoshop, going back to Photoshop CS3. To migrate from multiple versions of Photoshop, migrate presets sequentially from one version of Photoshop at a time.
Note:
You can, however, choose not to migrate them by deselecting Advanced Options > Import previous settings and preferences on the confirmation screen that appears after you click Update in the Creative Cloud desktop app.
Advanced options available after you click Update in the Creative Cloud desktop app
Migrate presets after installing/updating Photoshop
If you chose not to migrate your presets when you updated Photoshop, or if you faced issues while migrating presets, you can select Edit > Presets > Migrate Presets to migrate presets, settings, and preferences later in Photoshop. Photoshop looks for an older version of Photoshop on the same system and prompts you to migrate presets.
You can bring your presets from one computer to another, or to an offline computer, by manually exporting them and then importing. The Export/Import Presets is not restricted to computers running Photoshop as part of Creative Cloud.
SOURCE COMPUTER: On the computer that has the presets you want to migrate, do the following:
Open Photoshop.
Choose Edit > Presets > Export/Import Presets.
Choose Export Presets.
Select the desired presets and move them to the Presets To Export column.
Click Export Presets.
Select the folder to export your presets to. Choose a folder you can use to transfer the files using a USB drive, network, or an online sharing service.
Click OK.
TARGET COMPUTER: On the computer receiving the imported settings, do the following:
Choose Edit > Presets > Export/Import Presets.
Select Import Presets.
Select the presets you want to import, or click Add All.
If you saved your presets to a folder that is not the default, choose Select Import Folder, and select the appropriate folder.
Click Import Presets.
You can move actions and presets across different versions of Photoshop on same or different desktops by saving them and loading them into the target application.
SOURCE COMPUTER: On the computer that has the presets you want to migrate, do the following:
Open Photoshop.
Choose Edit > Presets > Presets Manager.
Choose the desired option from the Preset Type drop-down menu. For example, choose Brushes.
Select the desired presets. For example, select the brushes that you want to migrate.
Click Save Set and then, click Save. For a set of Brushes, then Photoshop creates a .ABR file at the following location by default:
TARGET COMPUTER: On the computer receiving the imported settings, do the following:
Choose Edit > Presets > Presets Manager.
Click Load in the Presets Manager dialog box.
Select the saved set you want to load.
Click Load.
Photoshop has a number of setting files that you can manually copy from one installation to another. These files include:
Actions Palette.psp
Brushes.psp
Contours.psp
CustomShapes.psp
Default Type Styles.psp
Gradients.psp
Patterns.psp
Styles.psp
Swatches.psp
ToolPresets.psp
To move these settings to a new installation, copy these files from the following path on the source installation to the same path on the target installation: