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Tài iệu Photoshop cs5 by Dayley part 71 pot

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Part V
Painting, Paths,
Shapes, and Text
IN THIS PART
Chapter 16
Painting and Brushes
Chapter 17
Working with Paths and Vector
Shapes
Chapter 18
Working with Text
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CHAPTER
Painting and Brushes
IN THIS CHAPTER
Painting in Photoshop
Using brush-style editing tools
to edit photos
Painting with brush and non-
brush tools
Using Photoshop’s new wet
paint capabilities
Customizing paint brush
settings
Painting and tracing
techniques
A
lthough Photoshop is typically thought of as a photo-editing pack-
age, it also includes an arsenal of tools that makes it one of the pre-


mier painting applications as well. In fact, painting in Photoshop
means much more than in most other painting applications.
What makes painting so effective in Photoshop is that Adobe combined the
powerful photo-editing tools with the paint brush tools so you can use paint
brush strokes to apply localized photo editing and you can apply photo edit-
ing techniques to your painting.
This chapter discusses the Brush tools available in Photoshop for both edit-
ing and painting purposes. It also covers how to configure custom brushes to
increase the capability of those tools. Before you begin painting in Photoshop,
you likely want to switch to the Painting workspace by selecting Window ➪
Workspaces ➪ Painting from the main menu. This configures the workspace
specifically to support the painting tools.
Painting in Photoshop
Painting in Photoshop means much more than just painting colors onto a
blank document with a brush. Painting means using brushing techniques to
apply effects to fix problem areas of photographs, retrace history, blend
layers, apply color, and mix colors.
In this chapter, we discuss the tools and techniques that you can use to
apply some specific changes to images, create artwork, and create dramatic
artistic effects. Before we start, though, you should know a few things about
painting:
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l
Brushing techniques are applied by selecting the tool, setting the brush and tool options, and
then dragging the cursor on a specific area of the document using a mouse or stylus pen.
l
Painting is applied to the currently selected layer in the Layers panel, although some of the
tools sample from all the layers to apply the painting effect.

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When you have a selection active, the painting effect applies only inside the selection. This
allows you to use Photoshop’s powerful Selection tools to fine-tune your painting.
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Painting is a destructive task that alters pixels. It is a good idea to paint from a copy of the
background layer if you are altering a photo and then apply the change only when you
feel that the painting is finished.
l
You can paint on vector layers, but you need to convert them to Smart Object layers first.
l
Painting is not an exact science. You may need to try different brush styles, sizes, settings,
and strokes to achieve the results you are looking for.
Understanding the Painting Tools
The best way to understand painting in Photoshop is to look at the brush-based tools that
Photoshop provides. Understanding how these painting tools work can make you more effective at
both editing photos and applying artistic effects. This section discusses the painting tools and how
to use them.
You use three types of tools to paint in Photoshop: editing, painting, and mixing. Editing tools paint
by adjusting the pixels directly beneath the tool. Painting tools paint by applying color to the pixels
directly beneath the tool. Mixing tools paint by mixing color with the pixels directly beneath the tool.
Tip
When you are using any of the painting tools, keep in mind that holding down the Shift key while dragging the
cursor results in applying the stroke in a straight horizontal or vertical line. You also can hold down the Shift
key as you click the painting tool in two different locations in the image to create a straight paint stroke
between the two points. n
Painting tools and blending modes
Many of the painting tools provide blending modes that define the behavior and look of the effect
and how it blends to the pixels beneath. Blending modes are computer algorithms that define
methods to combine two pixels into one pixel. The idea is that instead of using one pixel or the
other, you can define several ways to combine the two to create a different outcome.

As you begin using the painting tools, you’ll notice that many of the tools offer a blending mode set-
ting of some sort. The painting tools use blending modes for a variety of purposes. For example, the
Brush tool allows you to set a blending mode that defines how the paint from the brush interacts and
blends with the pixels below. And when adding a texture to a brush, a blending mode is used to
define how the pixels from the pattern blend with the paint in the brush to create the texture.
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Chapter 16: Painting and Brushes
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The following sections describe the different blending modes and how they relate to the painting
tools. For the sake of the descriptions, we refer to the pixels below the brush as the base pixels.
Basic blending modes
These are the basic blending modes that can be used when painting:
l
Normal: This is the default option for most of the Brush tools. No blending is applied;
instead the value of the new pixels is the value created by the paint brush. When painting
tools use the Normal mode, the foreground color that is applied is based on the opacity,
flow, and airbrush settings. When editing tools use the Normal mode, the tool manipula-
tion is applied using the normal editing algorithm.
l
Dissolve: The blend is applied by randomly replacing the pixels with either the paint
brush value or the pixels beneath, depending on the pixel location and the opacity setting.
Using this option allows you to dissipate the effect of the painting effect, more than just
changing the opacity.
l
Behind: The painting effect is applied only on the transparent areas of the layer. This
mode works only when the Lock Transparency option is deselected for the layer.
l
Clear: This applies the painting effect as transparency. It’s similar to the Eraser tool, but it
works with the Shape, Paint Bucket, Brush, and Pencil tools to apply the transparency.
This mode works only when the Lock Transparency option is deselected for the layer.

Note
The Behind and Clear blending modes are not available if the selected Layer in the Layers panel is locked. n
Darkening blending modes
The next group within the blending modes menu contains darkening effects. These five blending
filters reduce the painting effect in the darker areas and apply more paint to the lighter pixels
below. The result is that the effects tend to darken the overall image:
l
Darken: The blend is applied by replacing the pixels with the darker of the base value or
the paint brush value. In other words, the painting effect is only applied to pixels in the
underlying pixels that are lighter than the value of the brush pixel. This has the effect of
darkening the image.
l
Multiply: The blend is applied by multiplying the base value of each pixel by the paint
brush pixel value. Multiplying a pixel by black always produces black, and multiplying a
pixel by white leaves the pixel value unchanged. This mode has the overall effect of dark-
ening the image.
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Color Burn: The blend is applied by darkening the base channel based on the brush color
by increasing the contrast between the two. This has the effect of darkening the image as
well as increasing color contrasts.
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Linear Burn: This darkens the image as it applies the blend by decreasing the brightness
based on the value of paint brush pixel.
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Darken Color: The blend is applied by replacing each of the channels of a pixel with the
darker between the base pixel channel and the paint brush pixel channel. This option
works a bit better than using the Darken mode because it uses the darkest values from

each of the channels to create the resulting color. For example, this mode may use red and
green from the base pixel and blue from the paint brush pixel.
Lightening blending modes
The Lightening blending modes work opposite of the darkening blending modes. As the painting
effect is applied, the results tend to lighten darker areas of the image while not impacting the
lighter areas of the image as much:
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Lighten: The blend is applied by replacing the pixels with the lighter of the base value or
the paint brush value. This has the effect of lightening the image and can be extremely
useful if applying filters to underexposed images.
l
Screen: The blend is applied by multiplying the inverse of the channel values of the paint
brush and base pixels. This results in a lighter color than either the paint brush value or
the base value. This has the same effect as projecting multiple photographic slides on top
of each other.
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Color Dodge: This applies the blend by decreasing the contrast between the color of the
channels in the paint brush pixel and the base pixels. This lightens the base pixels using
the paint brush pixel values.
l
Linear Dodge (Add): This lightens the images as it applies the blend by increasing the
brightness based on the paint brush pixel value of each channel.
l
Lighter Color: The blend is applied by replacing each channel of a pixel with the lighter
between the base pixel channel and the paint brush pixel channel. This option works a bit
better than using the Lighten mode because it uses the lightest values from each channel
to create the resulting color.
Adding contrast blending modes
These blending modes create contrast between the paint brush effect and the base pixels, making
the lighter areas lighter and the darker areas darker:

l
Overlay: This applies the blend by mixing the paint brush values with the base pixels
while preserving the shadows and highlights. This reduces the effect of extreme layer
adjustments that dramatically reduce the detail in the original image.
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Soft Light: This applies the blend based on the gray value of the paint brush pixel. If the
value of the paint brush pixel is darker than 50 percent gray, the base pixel is darkened
using a multiplying method. If the value of the paint brush pixel is lighter than 50 percent
gray, the base pixel is lightened using a dodging method. This has a similar effect to shin-
ing a diffused spotlight on the image.
l
Hard Light: This applies the blend based on the gray value of the paint brush pixel. If the
value of the paint brush pixel is darker than 50 percent gray, the base pixel is darkened
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Chapter 16: Painting and Brushes
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using a multiplying method. If the value of the paint brush pixel is lighter than 50 percent
gray, the base pixel is lightened using a screening method. This has a similar effect to
shining a harsh spotlight on the image. This option is great for adding shadows while
applying the filter.
l
Vivid Light: This applies the blend based on the gray value of the paint brush pixel. If the
value of the paint brush pixel is darker than 50 percent gray, the base pixel is darkened by
increasing the contrast. If the value of the paint brush pixel is lighter than 50 percent gray,
the base pixel is lightened by decreasing the contrast.
l
Linear Light: This acts as a combination of the linear dodge and linear. If a paint brush
pixel is darker than 50 percent gray, then the pixels in the image are darkened by the
brush stroke. If a paint brush pixel is lighter than 50 percent gray, then the pixel in the
image is lightened by the brush stroke.

l
Pin Light: This applies the filter based on the gray value of the paint brush pixel. If the
value of the paint brush pixel is darker than 50 percent gray, the darker of the paint brush
pixel and base pixel is used. If the value of the layer pixel is lighter than 50 percent gray,
the lighter of the paint brush pixel and base pixel is used.
l
Hard Mix: This adds the value of each RGB channel in the paint brush pixel to the corre-
sponding RGB channel in the base pixel. The values above 255 and below 0 are clipped,
so this can result in a large loss of detail.
Difference, Exclusion, Subtract and Divide blending modes
The Difference, Exclusion, Subtract and Divide blending modes blend the layers based on the dif-
ference between the two layers:
l
Difference: This applies the blend by setting the resulting pixel to the value of the differ-
ence between the paint brush pixel and the base pixel. Blending white inverts the pixel
value, and blending black results in no change.
l
Exclusion: This works similar to the Difference blend mode, but generates less contrast.
l
Subtract: This applies the blend by subtracting the pixel value in the paint brush from the
corresponding pixel in the image. The resulting pixel value is divided by a scale factor and
then added to an offset to make certain it still falls in the 0–255 range. The result is that
the darker the paint brush pixel is, the less effect it has on the image pixel.
l
Divide: This works that same way that the subtract blend mode does, but instead the
image pixel is divided by the paint brush pixel. This increases the range of variance in
changes in the image pixels.
Color blending modes
The final group of blending modes gives the selected layer a color influence over the layers under it:
l

Hue: This applies the blend by creating the resulting pixel using the luminance and satu-
ration of the base pixel but the hue of the paint brush pixel. This reduces the blend to
affect only the hue of the base pixels.
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Saturation: This applies the blend by creating the resulting pixel using the luminance and
hue of the base pixel but the saturation of the paint brush pixel. This reduces the blend to
affect only the saturation of the base pixels.
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Color: This applies the blend by creating the resulting pixel using the luminance of the
base pixel but the hue and saturation of the paint brush pixel. This limits the blend so it
doesn’t affect the brightness of the base pixels.
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Luminosity: This applies the blend by creating the resulting pixel using the hue and satu-
ration of the base pixel but the luminance of the paint brush pixel. This allows you to
apply it so it affects only the brightness of the base pixels.
Painting with painting tools
Painting tools, shown in Figure 16.1, paint by applying new color to the pixels in a specific region
under the tool. This is a pretty basic concept that has been around for decades. Photoshop
enhances the paint technique by allowing you to select specific brush styles, sizes, and settings that
control how pixels are painted in almost unlimited ways.
FIGURE 16.1
The Painting tools allow you to apply color to images using a variety of brush and pencil strokes.
Presets
Brush presets
Brush panel
Tablet Pressure
Controls Opacity

Airbrush
Tablet Pressure
Controls Size
Background SamplingContinuous Sampling
Once Sampling
Tip
You can select the Painting tools using the B hotkey, and you can toggle through the Brush, Pencil, Color
Replacement, and Mixer Brush tools by using the Shift+B hotkey sequence on the keyboard. n
The following list describes the Painting tools that you use to add color to your images:
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