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Photoshop questionNot being either very adventurous or adept in Photoshop, I am interested to know the best tool to use when selecting part of an image. I have tried the lassoo tools but find that I get a very jagged edge. Is there some way of avoiding this?
"The good thing about meditation is that it makes doing nothing respectable"
D3 - http://www.oneputtphotographics.com
John,
There are a stack of selection methods in PS; some of which I love and use all the time, some I loathe and never touch. I tend to use lasso, magic wand and quick mask techniques the most. The Quick Mask tool is the two circle-in-rectangle buttons under the swatched for foreground and background colours in the tools pane on the left of screen. The pen tool is a great device but I'm yet to master it so it just gives me grief. There are also some colour range selection methods but I find the ones I've just mentioned suit my purposes in the majority of cases. If you're concerned about jagged edges and a critical sharp edge isn't that important, try feathering the selection by a few pixels (use the "Feather" box in the options line for whichever tool you're using or in the "Select" menu). If a sharp well defined edge is critical, the magnetic lasso tool should work (if you've got good contrasting edges) or, failing that, flick to the quick mask method and choose a nice sharp hard brush to do the painting. Either way, you'll get a good clean edge. Don't be afraid to go in close and examine the selection at the pixel level to get it right. I've done some advanced selection methods using channels, the extract filter and those sort of things but I tend to keep these for really tricky selections of fine detail, such as whispy hair. Hope I'm not telling you stuff you already know. Simon
D300 l MB-D10 l D70 l SB-800 l 70-200 VR l TC 17-E l 18-70 f3.5-4.5 l 70-300 f4-5.6 l 50 f1.4 l 90 Macro f2.8 l 12-24 f4 http://www.redbubble.com/people/manta
Thanks for that Simon. I think that my mouse skills need some improvement.
"The good thing about meditation is that it makes doing nothing respectable"
D3 - http://www.oneputtphotographics.com
slow your mouse down......... and think of getting a wacom tablet Last edited by big pix on Sun Jul 02, 2006 10:19 am, edited 1 time in total.
Cheers ....bp....
Difference between a good street photographer and a great street photographer.... Removing objects that do not belong... happy for the comments, but .....Please DO NOT edit my image..... http://bigpix.smugmug.com Forever changing
Definitely the way to go John - I love my Wacom tablet!!! Using a mouse to do fine detail is like using a crowbar to do needlepoint. (Not that I've tested this theory..)
Simon
D300 l MB-D10 l D70 l SB-800 l 70-200 VR l TC 17-E l 18-70 f3.5-4.5 l 70-300 f4-5.6 l 50 f1.4 l 90 Macro f2.8 l 12-24 f4 http://www.redbubble.com/people/manta
Dargan lent me his Wacom tablet a little while back but I never persevered with it. Maybe I should have
"The good thing about meditation is that it makes doing nothing respectable"
D3 - http://www.oneputtphotographics.com
........yes........ EDIT: it does take a little getting used to....... but when you have they are great........well worth the money Cheers ....bp....
Difference between a good street photographer and a great street photographer.... Removing objects that do not belong... happy for the comments, but .....Please DO NOT edit my image..... http://bigpix.smugmug.com Forever changing
John,
have a look at the following video... may be a workflow you are after. http://av.adobe.com/russellbrown/ExtractSM.mov cheers http://www.markcrossphotography.com - A camera, glass, and some light.
John I have a couple of good books on CS2 specifically for photographers
Martin Eveniong and Scott Kelby being the 2 with the reputations I use them to learn as I go when there is a need but your welcome to borrow either for a couple of days to help master your current needs Bob G Bob
"Wake up and smell the pixels!"
If the tablet isn't something you like using, try finding a good trackball.
I have a tablet and I just don't use it because I prefer the accuracy of a trackball. But pretty much, a tablet or a trackball are probably the more accurate devices you'll get before you get into touchscreens. Producer & Editor @ GadgetGuy.com.au
Contributor for fine magazines such as PC Authority and Popular Science.
Thanks for all your help guys some great info . Ta
"The good thing about meditation is that it makes doing nothing respectable"
D3 - http://www.oneputtphotographics.com
I would definately recommend getting to grips with the pen tool. It's precision is unsurpased. Takes a little while to get the hang of it, but once you do it becomes second nature - and the degree of control you get is worth it.
Matt
I've been ogeling those Wacoms for a while, too. The 6"x8" Graphire can be had for $149 or so, is it worth buying? The step up to the Intuos is a big one (financially)...
Cheers Steffen. lust for comfort suffocates the soul
even if you have a wacom
the surface to tip of pen is slippery when you are usign it to do freeform selections with the lasso tool you will still get jaggy or wrangly results your hand will never be that steady i have used a wacom intuos for the last 3 years and the surface really is not representative of how an artist puts pen to paper, used to try to draw frrehanbd with it but the wacom recorded every single nuance of my stroke, so when i drew a quick curve it would look wrangly of course if you use illustrator the freehand paintbrush tool is smart to actually use the median of any input from a pen device so even if you draw a wrangly line in a rush it wil smooth it out to a clean bezier curve but were talking photoshop here best way is to put a sheet of paper on the tablet then put pen to tablet, the friction helps cancel out the jaggyness of your stroke otherwise if you want a perfect curved selection learn to use the bezier curve selection tool my 2 cents
Oneputt
Rokkstar is right. The pen tool is the power tool in Photoshop. The trick is to magnify your image to 300% and then slowly work your way around it with little drag clicks. This produces a path which can be saved and edited at any time. The path is easily turned into a selection by clicking the small dotted circle bottom of the path pallet. get used to working with this tool and you will soon become a selction master. Regards
Matt. K
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