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6.0 Combining Imagespage twoQuick mask fills the nonselected area of the image with red semitransparent color that can be edited with the painting tools. Use black to add to the mask, and white to remove it. To set your background and foreground colors to black and white, click on the default colors icon in the toolbox. Its the two little overlapping squares in the lower left corner of the illustration below. Click the switch colors icon, which is the little double headed arrow in the upper right corner to switch your background, and foreground colors from black to white. I magnified the image as much as was necessary to get a really good look at every part of the flowers edge when painting on the mask. Use the zoom tool, or the Navigator palette and try a 300 or 400 % magnification. Make sure the paintbrush, or whichever tool you use has its Opacity set to 100 %, in its options bar. Choose a hard edged brush from the first row in the brushes pop-up palette. |
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| Tutorials Brushes in 7 Using PS7 Brushes 7 Basics 7 Reference: Tools 7 Reference: Palettes Reference: Filters Reference: Effects Selections Channels Basic Layers Basic Pen How Much? Color Management Color Correction Combining Images Combining Images II Combining Images III Compositing in Photoshop Perfect Blend Multicolor Fill Curves, Levels, or Brightness/Contrast? Dodge and Burn Duotones Styles On Masks Organic Textures Abstract Background Make a Frame 3D Wire Text Doodling |
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Older Tutorials Elements Basics Reference: Elements Tools Reference: Elements Palettes How Do I...? Gotcha Pre-Beginner Pre-Beginner II Why Layers? Holes Fade In Playing With Styles Learning Effects Redeye Removal Artistic Filtering Symmetrical Flowers Simulated Alpha Channels Layer Masks Multilayer Masks Displacing Textures |
When you have the
mask covering every pixel of the background, go to the toolbox, and click
the standard selection button,
which is just to the left of the quick mask button. Your selection should look like what you see below. To be on the safe side, choose Select > Save Selection, and save the selection outline as an alpha channel in the Channels palette. That way, if you need it again, you can go to Select > Load Selection, and reload it. Since the flowers background is quite dark in the lower left quadrant, and fairly bright in the upper right, I dont want to include any of the background tones when I move it onto the evenly lit ferns. Should your image happen to be on a background which is very different from that of its destination, it is very important that you take care not to include any background remnants in the selection. They would move with the selection, and show as a fringe, or halo around the moved image. Ill show you what I mean, on the next page. Continue on page three |
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PS Elements Tips |
Copyright © 2004 by Jay Arraich.
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