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3 - Magic Selection Brush Tool |
The Magic Selection Brush is found in Photoshop Elements 4.0 and 5.0.
If you're using Photoshop Elements 6.0, use the Quick Selection tool.
To use the Magic Selection Brush tool, do the following.
Use the Zoom tool to enlarge your photograph to fill the screen with the area to be selected.
If you need to shift the image of your photograph around the screen, press and hold the spacebar.
The Hand tool is "on" as long as you hold the spacebar down.
Click on the image, hold, and drag it around.
Select the Magic Selection Brush tool.
Don't confuse it with the Selection Brush tool (which has a dashed box around its tip) or the Brush tool.
Look at the area to be selected, and compare it to area around it.
Which area will be easier to select?
Let's say you want to select the monument, below, from the blue sky.
If you use the Magic Wand tool, and click on the monument, the resulting selection is messy.
If you click of the sky instead, the selection is much cleaner, as seen below.
But, the sky is selected, and you want the monument.
Go to Select > Invert, or Shift + Ctrl + i, to change the selection from the sky to the monument.
Monument Selected - Messy
Sky Selected - Cleaner
Set the option bar settings.
The first icon of the threesome, New selection, should be selected.
The Indicate Foreground and Indicate Background icons will be used to add and subtract from the initial selection.
You can change the color of the brush mark.
Use the slider, or press [ or ], to change the brush size.
Click, hold, and drag to "paint" where you want the selection.
When you release the mouse button, a red brush mark will appear.
Photoshop Elements may take a few seconds to create the selection.
If the selection includes unwanted areas, do one of the following.
1) Press Alt.
2) Click, hold, and drag to "paint" where you don't want the selection.
The brush mark is blue for subtracting from the selection.
1) Click the Indicate Background icon in the options bar.
2) Click, hold, and drag to "paint" where you don't want the selection.
The brush mark is blue for subtracting from the selection.
The edge (border) of the area that you're selecting has to have a lighter tone or color, on one side, and a darker tone or color, on the other side.
You can increase the contrast temporarily by using a Levels adjustment layer.
Use the middle slider to increase the contrast.
You can also use a Threshold adjustment layer.
Go to Shadows or Highlights Selections for an example.
After you've finished making the selection, delete the Levels adjustment layer or the Threshold adjustment layer.
The selection will probably need to be refined.
Sometimes it's hard to see everything that's been selected—or hasn't been selected.
You can use the Selection Brush tool to look for "strays."
Go to Look for Strays with the Selection Brush Tool.
You may have to use the Selection Brush tool as a mop to refine your selection further.
Go to Selection Brush Mop.
You can use the four modify operations to refine your selection.
Go to Select > Modify, and select one of the commands.
The Border command creates a border, feathered on both sides, around the original selection border.
You can enter the size of the border, and can change its color.
You can also do this by going to Edit > Stroke.
The Smooth command is based on the color of the selection.
The command searches outside the edge of the selection for pixels that are the same color as those just inside the edge of the selection.
The range of the search is defined by how many pixels you enter in Sample Radius.
The Expand and Contract commands change the selection by the number of pixels you enter.
The Grow command selects more adjacent pixels.
The Similar command selects more pixels throughout the photograph, not just adjacent ones.
Go to Select > Grow, or Select > Similar.
This command is performed after you've made the selection, and placed it on a new layer.
To place a selection on a new layer, go to Layer > New > Layer via Copy, or press Ctrl + j.
Or, by moving it to another photograph, the selection is placed an a new layer.
If the edge of your selection has a fringe of unwanted pixels, you can remove them.
For example, let's say you selected a red apple from the top of a green picnic table.
Some of the green pixels of the picnic table may be present at the edge of the selection.
When you moved the apple to a blue bowl, this halo of green pixels are evident against the blue of the bowl.
Use Defringe to change the color of the green pixels to red, the color of the selection, the apple.
Go to Enhance > Adjust Color > Defringe Layer.
As describe above, you can invert a selection.
Feathering makes the edge of a selection gradually fade to transparent.
Go to Select > Feathering.
Before making a change to the selection, you may want to copy it to a new layer.
By doing so, you can reduce the opacity of the layer, erase parts of it, and so forth.
To copy a selection to a new layer, press Ctrl + j.
To make changes to the selection on its new layer, make sure the new layer is active (highlighted).
If you need to move the selection border, or the area that's been selected, go to Moving Selections.
If the marching ants of a selection are distracting, press Ctrl + h to hide the selection.
Press Ctrl + h, again, to make the selection reappear.
A hidden, and forgotten selection, may create havoc later.
If a tool isn't working the way it should be, and you've been working with a selection, check to make sure the selection isn't hidden.
Just press Ctrl + h, to check.
If you no longer need the selection, save it if you wish (see below).
Then, press Esc or Ctrl + d, to deselect.
You can sometimes reselect the selection.
Go to Select > Reselect, or press Shift + Ctrl + d.
If you may need the selection again, you can save it along with the PSD file of the photograph.
You can't save a selection with a JPEG file of your photograph.
Go to Saving Selections.
The Whiten Teeth tutorial uses the Magic Selection Brush tool.