Select with the quick selection tool – Adobe Photoshop CS4 User Manual
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USING PHOTOSHOP CS4
Selecting and masking
Last updated 1/10/2010
11
(Optional) Click Refine Edge to further adjust the selection boundary or view the selection against different
backgrounds or as a mask. See “
Select with the Quick Selection tool
You can use the Quick Selection tool
to quickly “paint” a selection using an adjustable round brush tip. As you
drag, the selection expands outward and automatically finds and follows defined edges in the image.
1
Select the Quick Selection tool
.
2
In the options bar, click one of the selection options: New, Add To, or Subtract From.
New is the default option if nothing is selected. After making the initial selection, the option changes automatically to
Add to.
3
To change the Quick Selection tool brush tip size, click the Brush menu in the options bar and type in a pixel size
or move the Diameter slider. Use the Size pop-up menu options to make the brush tip size sensitive to pen pressure
or a stylus wheel.
When creating a selection, press the right bracket (]) to increase the Quick Selection tool brush tip size; press the left
bracket ([) to decrease the brush tip size.
4
Choose Quick Selection options.
Sample All Layers
Creates a selection based on all layers instead of just the currently selected layer.
Auto-Enhance
Reduces roughness and blockiness in the selection boundary. Auto-Enhance automatically flows the
selection further toward image edges and applies some of the edge refinement you can apply manually in the Refine
Edge dialog with the Smooth, Contrast, and Radius options.
5
Paint inside the part of the image you want to select.
The selection grows as you paint. If updating is slow, continue to drag to allow time to complete work on the selection.
As you paint near the edges of a shape, the selection area extends to follow the contours of the shape edge.
Painting with the Quick Selection tool to extend the selection
If you stop dragging and then click or drag in a nearby area, the selection will grow to include the new area.
•
To subtract from a selection, click the Subtract from option in the options bar, then drag over the existing selection.
•
To temporarily switch between add and subtract modes, hold down the Alt (Windows) or Option (Mac) key.
•
To change the tool cursor, choose Edit > Preferences
> Cursors > Painting Cursors (Windows) or Photoshop
>
Preferences
> Cursors > Painting Cursors (Mac
OS). Normal Brush Tip displays the standard Quick Selection
cursor with a plus or minus sign to show the selection mode.