Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Mastering Photoshop CS5 - New Healing Properties

Adobe Photoshop CS5 recently released the latest version of Photoshop that can do much more than previous generations. Although it has a slightly different format, making it a little confusing to the previous Photoshop users, it has a number of useful tools that are more powerful than ever. Here are some healing tools that can help you file your photos of these ugly spots, whether for a professional portfolio or a family album.

He has been using Photoshop for almost the beginning. Introduced in CS2, the Spot Healing Brush helps to problem areas in the image, which is especially important when taking pictures of models. As a tool, is strong, powerful and fast. He does what he says with an immediate response, allowing you to edit images quickly. To the ends of Photoshop, the Spot Healing Brush has required no entry because it is an automated tool. It is a blind instrument because it works by looking for a color tone close to random, then fill the area selected for you, however, this is a problem in large areas as it seems. Nor is it good that the color chosen by the tool is very different because you can make your image look artificial.

While this tool has improved CS5 reorganization by making it more precise and accurate. Although still automatically, instead of seeking proximity to the nearest color wise, it seems the closest color and texture compared to the selected location. The intelligent search for what seems best, rather than what is the closest option. Photoshop has renamed it gives a name more accurate and appropriate. Now known as Content-Aware-healing function, it does what it says it heals by taking into account the content, allowing for more accurate corrections.

This tool is best for much smaller areas in the image, allowing you to remove the picture to the smallest unsightly blemishes. However, it is suitable for larger spaces. As Adobe has also reached a similar tool for larger spaces. Content-Aware filling works in exactly the same way that the smallest element, the only difference is that it works on a selection of large regions.

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