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Channelspage twoThe default setting for channels is to have black indicate the areas that are masked, or which would be excluded from a selection made from the mask. White indicates the areas that are not masked, and which will be included in the selection when the channel is loaded as a selection. However, you can reverse this order if you like. I have created a new channel mask on the photograph, this time creating various shapes with selection, and painting tools, and then filling them with white.
If I double click on the Alpha channels name in the Channels palette, its Channels Options dialog box will open.
If I choose the Selected Areas radio button, as shown, my mask will then display like this:
This is relevant because the latter is the way Photoshop displays color information in the CMYK color channels which automatically appear when you open a color image in that mode. Darker areas are where there is more of the color. Lighter areas are where there is less of the color. Either way, the selection which results when the channel is loaded as a selection is the same. I did that, then chose Select > Inverse to choose all areas other than the shapes I had drawn. I then chose Edit > Fill and chose Black from the menu. If you have the default colors in your toolbox colors boxes (with black as the foreground color), you can press Alt-Backspace to fill with the foreground color. Here is what I got. The selection edges are also shown. |
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The shapes were created with different tools which had different edge
effects. I also added feathering to several,
and anti-aliasing was selected for three
of the forms.
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I will repeat the same graphic information I showed you on page one for
one of the mask shape outlines to make the point, once again, that the
channels, and the masks they store are image maps. They tell Photoshop
How Much? to affect the existing pixels with any new colors,
adjustments, filters or effects that you add while a selection created
from that mask is active.
I have repeated this demonstration to try and make it very clear that
the mask is a map. It is a map of How Much? instruction for
Photoshop to use when a selection is created from that mask, and colors,
adjustments, filters, or effects are added. It tells Photoshop exactly
how much to affect the existing pixels with whatever you add. |
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Copyright © 2004 by Jay Arraich.
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