Transforming Selections In Photoshop

Similar documents
Add Photo Mounts To A Photo With Photoshop Part 1

The original image. Let s get started! The final result.

SNOWFLAKES PHOTO BORDER - PHOTOSHOP CS6 / CC

Shape Cluster Photo Written by Steve Patterson

Step 1: Create A New Photoshop Document

HAPPY HOLIDAYS PHOTO BORDER

Step 1: Open A New Photoshop Document

The Polygonal Lasso Tool In Photoshop

Worn And Torn Text In Photoshop

The options for both the Rectangular and Elliptical Marquee Tools are nearly identical.

This Photoshop Tutorial 2011 Steve Patterson, Photoshop Essentials.com. Not To Be Reproduced Or Redistributed Without Permission.

Note: Photoshop tutorial is spread over two pages. Click on 2 (top or bottom) to go to the second page.

The Background layer now filled with black.

Photoshop Tutorial: Basic Selections

Custom Shapes As Text Frames In Photoshop

Using Adobe Photoshop

Part 2 Add Frame, Arrow, Painted Text.

Word 3 Microsoft Word 2013

Intersecting Frame (Photoshop)

On the Web sun.com/aboutsun/comm_invest STAROFFICE 8 DRAW

FACULTY AND STAFF COMPUTER FOOTHILL-DE ANZA. Office Graphics

Pen Tool, Fill Layers, Color Range, Levels Adjustments, Magic Wand tool, and shadowing techniques

American University Office of Information Technology Training Unit

Using Masks for Illustration Effects

Circle Flower with the Elliptical Marquee Tool

Arrows and Watermark

DRAWING VECTOR VS PIXEL SHAPES IN PHOTOSHOP CS6

Adobe illustrator Introduction

Adobe photoshop Using Masks for Illustration Effects

Layers (Just the Basics) By Jerry Koons

To learn how to use Focus in Pix:

2. Click on the Freeform Pen Tool. It looks like the image to the right. If it s not showing, right click on that square and choose it from the list.

EDITING AND COMBINING SHAPES AND PATHS

Fly Away Butterfly. Step One: Open the Butterfly 1/8. Fly Away Butterfly by Jen White. Make a butterfly jump off the page and fly away.

ADOBE PHOTOSHOP Using Masks for Illustration Effects

Graphic Design & Digital Photography. Photoshop Basics: Working With Selection.

2.) Open you re my documents folder, and then open you re my pictures folder. Now create a new folder called mask advert.

Create a Swirly Lollipop Using the Spiral Tool Philip Christie on Jun 13th 2012 with 12 Comments

The Waxy Crayon (Photoshop)

CS Multimedia and Communications. Lab 06: Webpage Tables and Image Links (Website Design part 3 of 3)

WAYLAND FREE PUBLIC LIBRARY 3D Design and Printing Tutorial: Create a Keychain

American University Office of Information Technology Training Unit

2 SELECTING AND ALIGNING

Create Text Inside a Shape with Photoshop CS6

Photoshop tutorial: Final Product in Photoshop:

Inkscape Tutorial: Floral Motif

DESIGNING A WEBSITE LAYOUT IN PHOTOSHOP CS4. Step 1

9 ADVANCED LAYERING. Lesson overview

Interactive Tourist Map

PHOTOSHOP New File. To create a new file, select File > New and a dialog box will open.

1. Open PowerPoint and you will see the introductory screen that contains different themes and templates. From the selection displayed, choose Slice.

Using Adobe Photoshop

OrgPublisher Advanced Box Layout Editor

4 Working with Selections

PhotoShop Selection Tools

Basic Tools. Chapter 1. Getting started

Corel Draw 11. What is Vector Graphics?

TITLE: GLASS GOBLET. Software: Serif DrawPlus X8. Author: Sandra Jewry. Website: Draw Plus Tutorials by San. Skill Level: Beginner.

2. Drag and drop the cloud image onto your desktop to be used later in the tutorial.

CHAPTER 1 COPYRIGHTED MATERIAL. Getting to Know AutoCAD. Opening a new drawing. Getting familiar with the AutoCAD and AutoCAD LT Graphics windows

Adobe Photoshop CS2 Reference Guide For Windows

The playhead, shown as a vertical red beam, passes each frame when a movie plays back, much like movie fi lm passing in front of a projector bulb.

Photoshop Tutorial: Removing the Background from an Image

9 Using Appearance Attributes, Styles, and Effects

Introduction To Inkscape Creating Custom Graphics For Websites, Displays & Lessons

Exercise III: Creating a Logo with Illustrator CS6

2. If a window pops up that asks if you want to customize your color settings, click No.

Ombre Banner. Step One: Prepare the Workspace. Step Two: Create a Rectangle. digitalscrapper.com /blog/ombre-banner/ Ombre Banner by Jenifer Juris

Using Microsoft Word. Working With Objects

How to...create a Video VBOX Gauge in Inkscape. So you want to create your own gauge? How about a transparent background for those text elements?

3 WOrkinG WiTH SElECTiOnS lesson overview

MAKING A TRIPTYCH IN PHOTOSHOP CC

Display Systems International Software Demo Instructions

Adobe Photoshop How to Use the Marquee Selection Tools

WHCC Sports and Events

Rev. D 10/26/2012 Downers Grove Public Library Page 1 of 44

COPYRIGHTED MATERIAL. Adobe Illustrator CC Jumpstart. Lesson 1

Paint/Draw Tools. Foreground color. Free-form select. Select. Eraser/Color Eraser. Fill Color. Color Picker. Magnify. Pencil. Brush.

Photoshop Tutorial: Removing the Background from an Image

CS Multimedia and Communications REMEMBER TO BRING YOUR MEMORY STICK TO EVERY LAB! Lab 02: Introduction to Photoshop Part 1

Photoshop Fundamentals

12 APPLYING EFFECTS. Lesson overview

Adobe Illustrator CC 2018 Tutorial

Adobe InDesign CC Tutorial Part 1. By Kelly Conley

PowerPoint Basics (Office 2000 PC Version)

Quick Guide for Photoshop CC Basics April 2016 Training:

14. Using Illustrator CC with Other Adobe Applications

PowerPoint Slide Basics. Introduction

USING THE PHOTOSHOP TOOLBOX

Intermediate Microsoft Word 2010

Adobe Illustrator CS Design Professional GETTING STARTED WITH ILLUSTRATOR

Word 2007: Inserting & Formatting Pictures

Microsoft Office Training Skills 2010

HYPERSTUDIO TOOLS. THE GRAPHIC TOOL Use this tool to select graphics to edit. SPRAY PAINT CAN Scatter lots of tiny dots with this tool.

PHOTO in TEXT (FILLED TEXT) ( Using Photoshop Elements 2018 )

Photoshop / Editing paths

Create a Cool Vector Robot Character in Illustrator

Shape and Line Tools. tip: Some drawing techniques are so much easier if you use a pressuresensitive

How to Use the Pixlr Online Image Editor: 9 Steps (with Pictures)

Today, I m going to show you how use custom shapes and Layer styles in Photoshop CS3 to create a creative Christmas illustration. Let s get started!

Transcription:

Transforming Selections In Photoshop Written by Steve Patterson. In previous tutorials, we learned how to draw simple shape-based selections with Photoshop s Rectangular and Elliptical Marquee Tools. Using these tools is easy enough, yet it s amazing how frustrating it can be sometimes to draw a selection in exactly the right shape, size and location we need. Often, we click in the wrong spot to begin the selection, or we wish we had made it wider, taller, further to the left or right, or whatever the case may be, leading many Photoshop users, especially beginners, to undo the selection and try again, and again, and again until they finally get it right. Fortunately, there s no need to go through all that hassle and frustration because Photoshop makes it easy to move, resize and reshape selection outlines after we draw them using the Transform Selection command! Download our tutorials as print-ready PDFs! Learning Photoshop has never been easier! Here s an image I have open in Photoshop: The original image. I want to select the area around the butterfly, so I ll grab the Rectangular Marquee Tool from Photoshop s Tools panel:

Selecting the Rectangular Marquee Tool. With the Rectangular Marquee Tool selected, I ll click somewhere in the top left corner of the area I want to select, then with my mouse button still held down, I ll drag down to the bottom right corner of the area to draw my initial selection outline around the butterfly, releasing my mouse button when I m done to complete the selection: Dragging out a rectangular selection around the butterfly. Unfortunately, if we look at my selection outline, we see that I didn t do a very good job with my initial attempt. Some of the butterfly is still extending out beyond the top, left and right edges of my selection:

My first selection attempt didn t turn out as well as I had hoped. What many people would do in this case is undo the selection and try again, hoping they get it right the next time, but why keep starting over when we can just fix what we already have? That s exactly what we can do using the Transform Selection command. Free Transform vs Transform Selection Before we look at how to use Transform Selection, it s important to note the difference between it and another similar yet very different command, Free Transform. Both are used to move, resize and reshape selections. The difference is that Free Transform affects the pixels inside the selection outline while Transform Selection affects only the selection outline itself. I ll go up to the Edit menu in the Menu Bar along the top of the screen and choose Free Transform: Selecting Free Transform from the Edit menu.

The Free Transform command places transform handles (little squares) around the selection, one in each corner and one on the top, bottom, left, and right. We can alter the shape and size of the selection by clicking on any of the handles and dragging them. Since the butterfly s wings are currently extending out beyond the left and right edges of my selection, I ll need to make my selection wider. Watch what happens, though, when I use Free Transform to drag the left side of the selection further towards the left: Resizing the left edge of the selection with Free Transform. Since Free Transform affects the pixels inside a selection, all I ve managed to do is stretch the image itself. The selection outline, which is what I wanted to resize, didn t move, and the butterfly s wing now extends even further outside my selection than it did before. In many cases when retouching images or creating photo effects, resizing and reshaping the image with Free Transform is exactly what we want to do, but not in this case. I needed to resize my selection outline without moving anything inside the selection. For that, we ll need the Transform Selection command. I ll press the Esc key on my keyboard to exit out of Free Transform and undo the change. To access the Transform Selection command, go up to the Select menu at the top of the screen and choose Transform Selection:

Go to Select > Transform Selection. The Transform Selection command also places the same handles around the selection, just like Free Transform did, but these handles affect the selection outline itself, not the pixels inside of it. I ll click on the left handle and drag it further towards the left, just as I did with Free Transform a moment ago. This time, I m moving the left edge of the selection outline without moving the image. The butterfly s left wing now fits easily within my selection: Clicking on the left Transform Selection handle and dragging it further to the left. I ll do the same thing with the right edge of the selection outline, extending it further to the right by dragging its handle:

Dragging the right edge of the selection outline further to the right. I ll also click on the top handle and drag it upward to fit the top of the butterfly into the selection: Dragging the top Transform Selection handle. You can move and rotate the selection outline as well using Transform Selection. To move it, simply click anywhere inside the selection outline and drag it around inside the document with your mouse. To rotate it, move the cursor outside the selection outline, then click and drag. Here, I ve rotated the selection outline a few degrees counterclockwise:

Rotating the selection outline without rotating the image inside the selection. When you re done, press Enter (Win) / Return (Mac) to accept the changes and exit out of the Transform Selection command. With my selection outline now perfectly sized and positioned where I want it thanks to Photoshop s Transform Selection command, let s do something interesting with it. I ll quickly copy the selected area to its own layer by pressing Ctrl+J (Win) / Command+J (Mac) on my keyboard: The selected area is copied to its own layer above the original image. I ll click on the Layer Styles icon at the bottom of the Layers panel:

Clicking the Layer Styles icon. I ll choose Stroke from the list of Layer Styles, which I can use to place a simple photo border around the selected area, giving me a picture in picture effect: Choosing a Stroke layer style. This opens Photoshop s Layer Style dialog box with options for the stroke appearing in the middle column. I ll set the Size of my stroke to around 13 px (pixels) and change the Position to Inside, which will give my stroke sharp corners. Then I ll set my stroke color to white by clicking on the color swatch to the right of the word Color and selecting white from the Color Picker: The Stroke options in the Layer Style dialog box.

I ll add a shadow to the selected area as well by clicking directly on the words Drop Shadow at the top of the list of layer styles along the left of the dialog box. The middle column of the dialog box changes to show options for the drop shadow. I ll lower the Opacity down to around 60% so the shadow appears less intense, and I ll change itsangle to 120. Finally, I ll set the Distance to 13 px and the Size of the shadow to 10 px: The Drop Shadow options in the Layer Style dialog box. I ll click OK to exit out of the Layer Style dialog box, and we can see the white stroke and drop shadow now applied to the selected area in the document window: The butterfly now appears to be in its own photo within the larger image.

Finally, let s quickly convert the original image in the background to black and white. I ll click on the Background layer in the Layers panel to select it, then press Ctrl+J (Win) / Command+J (Mac) to duplicate the layer. Photoshop gives us lots of ways to convert images to black and white, including the amazing Black And White image adjustment first introduced in Photoshop CS3, but in this case, I ll just desaturate the image by pressingshift+ctrl+u (Win) / Shift+Command+U (Mac) on my keyboard: Creating a copy of the Background layer, then desaturating the copy. With the background now desaturated, here s my final picture in picture result which I was able to create quickly and easily thanks in large part to Photoshop s Transform Selection command:

The final effect. And there we have it!