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Click the Use list arrow, and then select a fill option: ◆ Foreground Color, Background Color, Color, Content-Aware New!, Pattern, History, Black, 50% Gray, or White.. Creating Spot Col

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Photoshop gives you many choices when it comes time to add or mod-ify the colors of a document—paintbrushes, airbrushes, and drawing tools, just to name a few Two little-used but powerful tools are the Stroke and Fill Commands Both the Stroke and Fill commands work with selection tools For example, you may want to create a unique stroke around an object, or fill a specific area of a document with a color or pattern If that's the case, then the Stroke and Fill commands are the best and fastest ways to perform those operations

Using the Stroke and

Fill Commands

Create a Stroke

Create a selection using any of

Photoshop's selection tools, or

really get fancy and make a

selection from one of Photoshop's

Shape drawing tools

TIMESAVER To further control

the process, perform the stroke (or

fill) operations within a new layer

Click the Edit menu, and then click

Stroke.

Enter a Width value (1 to 250) for

the stroke

Click the Color box, and then

select a color (the color box

defaults to the foreground color)

Select a location option (Inside,

Center, or Outside) for the stroke

of the selection marquee

Click the Mode list arrow, and then

select a blending mode

Enter an Opacity percentage value

(0% to 100%) for the stroke

Select the Preserve Transparency

check box to protect any

transparent image areas (if there

are no transparent areas, this

option is disabled)

Click OK.

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2 pixel stroke applied to the image.

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Create a Fill

Create a selection using any of

Photoshop's selection tools

Click the Edit menu, and then click

Fill.

Click the Use list arrow, and then

select a fill option:

◆ Foreground Color, Background

Color, Color, Content-Aware

(New!), Pattern, History, Black,

50% Gray, or White

Click the Mode list arrow, and then

select a blending mode

Enter an Opacity value (0% to

100%) for the stroke

Select the Preserve Transparency

check box to protect any

transparent image areas (if there

are no transparent areas, this

option is disabled)

Click OK.

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Fill applied to the image.

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Did You Know?

You can use the Fill command for more

than filling an area with a solid color

or unique pattern For example,

select-ing a sepia color, and changselect-ing the Fill

Blending mode to Color, tints the

selected area with sepia, creating an

old-style, sepia-toned image

Experiment with the Fill blending

modes to create unique image effects

See Also

See “Using Content-Aware Fill” on

page 100-101 for more information on

using the Content-Aware option in the

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When you work in the world of service bureaus and printing presses, there are certain things you must do to create an accurate printed doc-ument The color mode of the image will be CMYK, and the output of the document will most likely be in a format designed to create color plates such as DCS 2.0 (Desktop Color Separations) In addition, you

may want to apply a spot color to the image Spot colors instruct a

printer to apply a specific color to a specific portion of a document For example, you may want to create a book cover jacket, and you want the author's name in a specific Pantone Blue, or you may want to apply

a varnish to a portion of a brochure Whatever the case, you will need

to create a spot color channel

Creating Spot Color

Channels

Create a Spot Color Channel

Open a document

If the document is not in the CMYK

format, click the Image menu,

point to Mode, and then click

CMYK to convert it.

Create a selection, defining the

area for the spot color Use any of

Photoshop's selection tools,

including the Type Mask tool

Select the Channels panel.

Click the Channels Options button,

and then click New Spot Channel.

Click the Color box, and then

select a color

If you need a specific press color,

such as one from the Pantone

Matching System, click the Color

Libraries button in the Color

Picker, select from the available

color sets, and then click OK.

The Name box displays the name

of the selected color

Enter a Solidity value (0 %to 100%)

to view the spot color at a specific

opacity (Solidity does not affect

press output)

Click OK.

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Spot color

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The Auto Contrast command adjusts the tonality of the image without impacting color The Auto Color command adjusts the tonality and color

of the image by ignoring channels and looking directly at the composite image The automatic color commands receive their adjustment cues from information within the active image, including any erroneous color information For example, if the image contains a large border (typically white), the auto commands will factor that information into the correc-tion of the image It's best to correct any dust or scratch problems and crop out any borders before applying the Auto Contrast and Auto Color commands

Using the Auto

Contrast and Auto

Color Commands

Use the Auto Contrast Command

Open an image

Click the Image menu, and then

click Auto Contrast.

IMPORTANT Use the Auto

buttons (Levels, Contrast, Color)

only if you do not understand how

to manually control the image

using powerful adjustments, such

as Levels and Curves

Use the Auto Color Command

Open an image

Click the Image menu, and then

click Auto Color.

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Did You Know?

You can use a selection to define how

the Auto Contrast and Auto Color

commands work If the image contains

a border, and you don't want the Auto

command using the border to influence

the correction, simply select the

Rectangular marquee and draw a

border around the image When the

Auto command is applied, only the

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Through interactive feedback using a Histogram, the Levels adjustment gives you live information about the tonal values in the active image

It's an excellent tool to perform overall tonal adjustments and some color correction Auto Tone command on the Image menu or Auto but-ton in the Levels dialog box is considered a quick-fix color adjustment which, in some cases, works just as well as manually correcting color

However, the average photo usually has more than one simple problem,

so it's usually best to manually adjust an image Since the Auto Tone command or Auto button relies solely on information contained within the actual image—information that is sometimes inaccurate—it's usu-ally best to correct the image manuusu-ally or use a preset level For exam-ple, you can use a preset level to make the midtones brighter or darker,

or increase the contrast

Using Levels

Adjustment

Commands

Adjust Levels

Open an image

Click the Image menu, point to

Adjustments, and then click

Levels.

To adjust levels automatically,

click Auto Continue with manual

adjustments, or skip to Step 9

TIMESAVER Click the Image

menu, and then click Auto Tone

To select preset mix levels, click

the Preset list arrow, and then

select the preset you want

Click the Channel list arrow, and

then select the composite channel

Drag the Input Levels sliders to

adjust the brightness level

Drag the Output Levels sliders to

adjust the level of ink sent to the

output device (printer)

To save settings, click the Preset

Options button, click Save Preset,

type a name, and then click Save.

Click OK.

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Photoshop's Exposure adjustment is primarily designed for performing tonal adjustments to 32-bit High Dynamic Range (HDR) images, but it works with 8-bit and 16-bit images as well The Exposure adjustment changes an image using a linear color space (gamma 1.0), not the image's current color space When used with HDR images, it gives you the ability to draw out details of the image that otherwise might be completely lost within the shadows and highlights

Using the Exposure

Adjustment

Use the Exposure Adjustment

Click the Image menu, point to

Adjustments, and then click

Exposure.

Click the Preset list arrow, and

then select the preset you want, or

select from the following options

Exposure Adjusts the highlight

end of the image's tonal scale

with little effect in the extreme

shadows

Offset Darkens the shadows

and midtones with little effect

on the highlights

Gamma Correction Adjusts the

image gamma, using a simple

power function Similar to

adjusting the midpoints in an

image's brightness

Use the eyedroppers to adjust only

the image's luminance values, not

all the color channels, as you

would with Levels or Curves

Black Sets the Offset, shifting

the point you click to pure

black

White Sets the Exposure,

shifting the point you click to

pure white

Midtone Sets the Gamma,

shifting the point you click to

middle gray

Select the Preview check box to

view changes to the active image

To save settings, click the Preset

Options button, click Save Preset,

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Preset list arrow

Ngày đăng: 02/07/2014, 18:20