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Photostack in cs6
Photostack in cs6













photostack in cs6

Click done and you will be taken back to Bridge. In camera raw click the 'select all' box at the top left, I apply auto white balance and a small saturation boost (do not apply lens correction here). I did have to first tweak the selection manually at the tip of one toe, though, since there was a gap in the drawing's edge there. Right click on one of the highlighted images and select 'open in camera raw'. (View the picture on a non-white background to see the effect!) To do that, I selected the background (including the gaps between the toes) again, enlarged the selection by two pixels and feathered it by one to put the selection boundary just inside the edge of the drawing, and then used Color to Alpha to replace white with transparency in the selected area. Then I cleaned up the remaining not-quite-white spots in the background by first selecting the background using the Magic Wand tool with threshold 0, then enlarging the selection by one pixel and shrinking it by the same amount, and filling the resulting selection by one pixel.įinally, just for a finishing touch, I decided to make the background transparent. I also used the middle slider to slightly darken the midtones for improved contrast. Next, I used the Levels tool to make the background pure white and to darken the dark parts a little. I left the settings at their default values (sensitivity = 72, selection growth = 16, middle preservation = 5), but unchecked the "despeckle" checkbox. A range of options like Entropy and Kurtosis will become available. With your Smart Object layer selected, click Layer (in the top tool bar) then click on Smart Objects->Stack Modes. There's a similar plugin available for Photoshop. With all this duplicating and rotating, the final step to creating mandalas in Photoshop is pretty straight forward. ttf file completely fine: And it even works in Pages: So what on Earth is going on The rogue 'w' in photoshop appears to be from a different font called Mistral, I think. However, Photoshop CS6 does something really odd to the 'w' glyph: The. I made this in GIMP, but the general steps should be similar in Photoshop:įirst, I used the Descreen plugin to remove the screen pattern. It works perfectly when embedded in a website.















Photostack in cs6