Kate's Point of View

The Product of Creative Frustration

Month: August 2011 Page 5 of 7

Photoshop Lesson #7: Copying Pieces From One Image to Another

I’ve mentioned in past posts that I’m teaching an upcoming Photoshop course at work. I’m not an expert but I can make my way around the tool. I’m sharing my class in pieces. This post is about using the copying pieces from one image onto another.

There are real reasons why you might want to take part of one image and place it on another. Maybe you need to make a collage of images. Maybe you need a logo to appear on top of your picture. Maybe you want to reuse a watermark.

There are also funny reasons you would want to use one part of an image in another.

There are a few ways to copy parts of an image from one file to another. Regardless, you will need to open up both images.

Method 1: First go to the image from which you want to copy something. Click on the Rectangular Marquee Tool (if you’d prefer a different shaped marquee, click on that icon on your toolbar and hold down your mouse button so other shaped options appear and select the one that best suits you). It looks like this . After you have selected that tool and move your mouse over top of your image, you will see your cursor look like a plus sign. Put your cursor on one far corner of the area you would like to copy, click and drag to the other corner. When you release your mouse you will see a dotted line surrounding your selection.

Copy your select either by Control + C or by Edit … Copy.

Go to the image to which you want to copy something. Paste your selection from the other image either by Control + V or Edit … Paste. Your end result should look something like this:

It’s a step in the right direction but the newly pasted item is in an odd spot in the picture. You can drag it to the appropriate spot by selecting Move Tool, which looks like this , and dragging your pasted item to the correct spot. This will result in something more like this:

That’s definitely better, but the pink showing up on the background is weird. A better option here would have been method 2.

Method 2: When you are working with illustrations and things with solid blocks of colors, method 2 is likely a better option. First go to the image from which you want to copy something. Select the Magic Wand Tool, which looks like . After you have selected that tool and move your mouse over top of your image, you will see your cursor look like a wand. Click on part of the image you want to copy. Holding the Shift key, select all parts of the image you want to copy. When you are done, you should see dotted line surrounding your selection.

Copy your select either by Control + C or by Edit … Copy.

Go to the image to which you want to copy something. Paste your selection from the other image either by Control + V or Edit … Paste. Your end result should look something like this:

The newly pasted item is in an odd spot in the picture. You can drag it to the appropriate spot by selecting move tool and dragging your pasted item to the right spot. This will result in something more like this:

Not all items are as easy to work with as this example but the methodology you use is the same.

Want to start from the beginning? View class 1, which reviews the Photoshop toolbar. View Class 2, which reviews pictures for print versus web. View Class 3, which explores cropping and resizing images. View Class 4, which reviews balancing color. View Lesson 5, which goes over the clone stamp tool. View Class 6,which reviews color match.

As always, see something you disagree with or think is just plain wrong? Tell me! Seriously – I want to know.

This post originally appeared on Kate’s Point of View. © Kate. All rights reserved.

Moment Captured

Last week when Wonder Boy and I went to the Decemberists concert, our photo was taken for a local entertainment weekly.

We look pretty good, right?

This post originally appeared on Kate’s Point of View. © Kate. All rights reserved.

Yarn Bombing

Are you familiar with the concept of Yarn Bombing? It’s graffiti done completely with yarn. People crochet and knit cozies that fit on public things like parking meters. NPR covered it a while back and I was fascinated. People wrote in after the NPR story all up in arms but I was nothing but entertained. So imagine my joy when I found out people were yarn bombing in downtown Cincinnati!

This post originally appeared on Kate’s Point of View. © Kate. All rights reserved.

Getting Back to Nature

This past weekend Wonder Boy and I went camping with Frank the Tank’s family in Pennsylvania. By all accounts, I shouldn’t have come back well-rested. We tent camped and it rained at least a little every night and poured two of the nights. The shower situation was goofy. The bathhouse had two shower stalls but you had to press a button many feet outside of the stall to turn on your water. The water came on full blast but then only lasted for about 2 minutes so if you needed longer than that you had to streak across the room and press the button again. One of the pluses of the park in which we camped the lake where you could go swimming and fishing. Rain rendered the lake icy cold.

Despite all of that, or potentially because of it, I had a wonderful time.

There is something nice about getting so far removed from your routine that you can’t help but forget about looming tasks and chores. We hiked, roasted marshmallows, popped popcorn over the fire and got to see bears. Yes, bears.

Seeing the bears was a little because they were foraging for garbage. It’s great that they are able to get plenty to eat, but unfortunate that it has to happen at a cost to their more natural foraging and hunting instincts.

Some other pictures from the trip:

Photo credit to Wonder Boy

Me, Easy Breezy and Frank the Tank
This post originally appeared on Kate’s Point of View. © Kate. All rights reserved.

Photoshop Lesson #6: Color Match

I’ve mentioned in past posts that I’m teaching an upcoming Photoshop course at work. I’m not an expert but I can make my way around the tool. I’m sharing my class in pieces. This post is about using the Color Picker tool. It’s not the most powerful part of Photoshop, but I love it.

Using Photoshop you can get the exact color of any point in an image. It will get you the information in numerous ways:

  • HSB – Hue, Saturation Brightness
  • RGB – Red, Green, Blue 
  • Hex value – HTML-friendly color
  • Lab – Lightness Component, A Component, B Component
  • CMYK – Cyan, Yellow, Magenta, Black; color is represented by percentage saturation of each color

When you click your mouse anywhere on the color picker, the values for HSB, RGB, Hex, Lab and CMYK will all adjust accordingly.

By selecting the Color Libraries button, you can also view colors by common color systems. See the full list in the image below.

Knowing this is one thing, but it’s only useful if there are real world applications. And so:

  • Your brand guide lists your logos Pantone color for printers, but not RGB value (which is easy to apply in Microsoft Word) or hex value (for web). By looking up those colors, you can create headlines and graphics that tie in with your logo color.
  • You’re designing a piece in Photoshop (because you don’t know how to use InDesign) and want the type to match other elements in the piece.
  • Someone hands you a graphic and tells you to fix it and you need to figure out how to replicate things in the same color palette.
  • You’re handed a print piece and asked to make a version for the web but given no electronic files. You can easily scan in the piece and match the colors using Photoshop to replicate things online.

Ultimately, most people trying to match two colors just eyeball it. But by using Photoshop you can create pieces that look much more polished and pulled together.

How to Do It
The Color Picker is one of the easiest tools to use. Open an image and then click on the layered color boxes in your toolbar that look like this: . A window will open up and that’s your Color Picker. You’ll notice that if you move your mouse around over top your open image (outside the borders of the color picker window), your cursor will change to an eye dropper. Use this to sample a color from your image. Click in several different places on your image and you’ll see the color data in the color picker window change accordingly. You can also select a color right within the Color Picker window.

If you are only working within Photoshop, select your color and hit OK. This will change the colors shown in your toolbar for foreground color. (If you want to select a new background color, click on the curved double around to switch your colors and repeat the selecting process.)

If you want to take the color you just got from Photoshop and use it in another program, you will need the data shown in your color picker window here:

There are so many types of software you could use this in but I’ll only cover Microsoft Word here. To change the color of type to match what you are working with in Photoshop (and you would use these same steps for almost any other color in Word), go to your font color tool, which will reveal a window a new window.

Click on the more colors option, which will open up a new window. Select the Custom tab and the view will change to something similar to the Color Picker in Photoshop.

In the Red, Green and Blue fields you can type in the fields from R,G and B in Photoshop. This will result in a color that is an exact match to what you selected in Photoshop.

Want to start from the beginning? View class 1, which reviews the Photoshop toolbar. View Class 2, which reviews pictures for print versus web. View Class 3, which explores cropping and resizing images. View Class 4, which reviews balancing color. View Lesson 5, which goes over the clone stamp tool.

As always, see something you disagree with or think is just plain wrong? Tell me! Seriously – I want to know.

This post originally appeared on Kate’s Point of View. © Kate. All rights reserved.

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