Colour did you knows. How to Use Content Aware Fill in Photoshop CS5. At last my wait was over when Photoshop CS5 introduced its new feature of Content Aware Fill tool which and has reduced all of my effort to remove an object without affecting the background, wow! I have been waiting for such a miraculous feature for many years but now I am very happy to see this feature in CS5.
It is very simple and involves only a few steps to do this feature. So without much further ado, let’s start it. Open any image which contains a focal object and you want to remove it. Just have a glance at tutorial and you’ll know what I’m talking about. I grabbed two pics from here: Step 1 I have downloaded an image of a horse.
Remember better the resolution of the image, better the results of this effect. Step 2 Try to select such a file that has sufficient space around so that Photoshop can detect the surroundings of the object you are going to remove. Look closely the image it has a lot of space around it. Step 3 No more discussion though, let’s move forward. Step 4 Step 5 Final Result. 45 Photo Editing Tutorials for Photoshop. This post was originally published a few years ago, and since that time many of the tutorials that were featured in the post are no longer online. So we’ve revamped the article with a fresh selection of tutorials, some old and some new, that should prove to be very helpful.
Photoshop allows designers and photographers to improve photos in countless ways. Some photos are edited in a subtle way that the viewer may not even notice unless it is side-by-side with the original photo, and others are edited in more drastic ways. The good news is that there is a tutorial for just about anything you would want to do in Photoshop. Telling Stories with Shadows Create Vignette Effects with the Radial Filter in Photoshop CC Water Reflection Effect in Photoshop CS6 How to Add Reflections to Sunglesses with Photoshop Learn How to Remove a Person from a Photo Remove a Person and Recreate a Busy Background Using the Clone Tool Black & White Adjustment How to Replace a Sky Using Photoshop Dark Grunge Photo Effect.
How to Recycle Anything. Quick Tip: Using Photoshop to Add Vignette. Vignette (pronounced vin-’yet) is a sort of framing element that you’ll sometimes see in photos (particularly older photos or Lomo shots), in which the image fades out toward the corners. It’s most commonly seen as a fade out to black, but white is also used sometimes. The vignette can be a powerful element of the photo because it has a natural tendency to draw the eye toward the center of the photo. Vignette can be produced naturally if you’re using a lens intended for a smaller medium (like using a dSLR lens on a film SLR), because parts of the lens actually block out some of the light from hitting the sensor or film. There are a few other methods of getting the vignette effect, but the simplest of them is with Photoshop. Also, using Photoshop will allow you a wider range of control since it can be adjusted many times without destroying pixels.
The following Photoshop techniques are non-destructive (destroying pixels is a bad thing, and it’s downright mean) and easy to adjust. Up and Running with Photoshop Lightroom 3.