Add colors to Your Dream.....

Members Login
Username 
 
Password 
    Remember Me  
Post Info TOPIC: Discover the Healing Brush & Patch Tool


Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 145
Date: Dec 18, 2009
Discover the Healing Brush & Patch Tool
Permalink   
 


The healing brush is just an incredible tool in Photoshop 7 & CS. This tool alone is often worth the price of the software if you’re a professional photographer or retoucher.

bsczr0000.jpg

All you have to do is Alt/Opt click to choose a source point (aka ‘sample’) from which to heal or replace into with the healing brush. Try it out if you have the appropriate version of Photoshop.

bsczr0001.jpg

Choose a good part of skin that you want to heal into a bad part. And Alt click and then just use the brush to magically ‘heal’ the bad part. Photoshop does the actual job of 'somehow' replacing and mixing the pixels.

bsczr0002.jpgbsczr0006.jpg

Once again you have brush options. You can also choose Pattern instead of sample if you want to really screw up this guy’s forehead. Photo is from my photos.com collezioni.

bsczr0003.jpg

It will be up to you as the master of Photoshop and it’s tools to decide what parts to blend in where. Because the skin tone is generally consistent you can sample from a good part of it to heal a worse part; vs. sample from his hair to heal skin.

Here you can see a before and after view.

bsczr0004.jpg

bsczr0005.jpg

I only worked on it for about two minutes. It is so much better than the old school way of selecting with a lasso and copy pasting, the healing brush is just a godsend for all Photoshop users in retouching jobs.

You can create a snapshot in the history palette of where you’re at.

bsczr0008.jpg

This saves the current state of the document at the top of the palette. As long as the document’s open you can switch between different snapshots.

bsczr0009.jpg

Get my complete Basic Photoshop video training to learn it everything you need to become a proficient Photoshop user here.

bsczr0010.jpg



__________________

my23.jpg




Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 145
Date: Dec 18, 2009
Permalink   
 

If you're working on the same image and created a snapshot, go back to the original as shown and then you can continue working from scratch.

bsczs0001.jpg

The patch tool bsczs0000.jpg is similar to the Healing brush and is located underneath it in their toolbar menu. The patch tool allows you to do the same basic function of blending pixels from one area into another area except in a different fashion.

First (with the tool selected) you make a selection around an area and then drag it to another area to replace either the source or destination pixels (depending on your choice in the options bar).

With source selected I’m making a selection of the eye bsczs0002.jpg and then dragging the patch selection over to the middle of the forehead. bsczs0003.jpg Now the forehead will be patched into the eye. Remember that with ‘Source’ selected that wherever you drag the patch will bring those pixels into the selected area aka the source.

Here I'm patching the other eye.

bsczs0004.jpg

You can easily take this into sick jokes, etc. My eyes, my eyes...

bsczs0005.jpg

Whenever you have a selection remember that you can Ctrl/Cmd ‘D’ to deselect

bsczs0006.jpg

or choose deselect from the Select menu..if you don’t it will most likely screw a lot of things up.

Using the snapshot tool, I’ve created different ‘captures’ of the document at different times and I can switch to and work on from there with any of them.

bsczs0007.jpg

The original is on the top.

bsczs0008.jpg

You can toggle through your different snapshots or the history palette itself by dragging the slider down.

bsczs0009.jpg

bsczs0010.jpg

Ok, this is just sick isn’t it. Imagine what you can do. But it is a good example...

With the Patch tool on destination you can drag your original patch to where you want it to put the patch right there.

bsczs0011.jpg


You can see this clearly with the images as shown: the eye is patched onto the destination of the forehead.

bsczs0012.jpg

Here with the patch tool on destination, I can drag a portion of the forehead to the cheekbone (for example purposes). bsczs0013.jpgbsczs0014.jpgbsczs0015.jpg When retouching you’ll want to look for good areas to replace the worse areas (..basic photoshop).

For a clean up job, take a good portion such as this and move it to the area you want to patch (on destination). This tool is also such a miracle worker for quick touchup jobs. And just think...most people don’t know how to do something like this or have any idea how easy it is actually.

But since you paid for Photoshop and now know how to do this. You can charge them based on time by doing this quick and then spending time mastering the pen tool (haha I’m not officially endorsing this).

Here is another example.  With patch on 'destination' just drag a good portion to cover an area that needs work.

bsczs0016.jpgbsczs0017.jpg

bsczs0018.jpgbsczs0019.jpg

In Photoshop CS you now get a preview when you drag the patch around of the forthcoming patch when on source. On destination you just drag your patch to another area.

bsczs0020.jpg

To ‘get it’ for everything Photoshop related get your full training right here with my Basic Photoshop video tutorials now less than $50.

bsczs0021.jpgbsczs0022.jpg



__________________

my23.jpg


Page 1 of 1  sorted by
 Add/remove tags to this thread
Quick Reply

Please log in to post quick replies.

Tweet this page Post to Digg Post to Del.icio.us


Create your own FREE Forum
Report Abuse
Powered by ActiveBoard