Adobe photoshop cs2 Benutzerhandbuch

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ADOBE PHOTOSHOP CS2 
User Guide 
For convenience, it’s recommended that you create perspective planes in a previous Vanishing Point session. 
Copy an item to the clipboard. The copied item can be from the same or different document. Keep in mind that 
you can paste only a raster (not vector) item. 
Note: If you’re copying type, select the entire text layer and then copy to the clipboard. You’ll be pasting a rasterized 
version of the type into Vanishing Point. 
(Optional) Create a new layer.
Choose Filter > Vanishing Point.
If necessary, create one or more planes in the image.
Paste the item. The item is now a floating selection in the preview image. By default, the Marquee tool is selected.
Important: After pasting the image in Vanishing Point, do not immediately use the Marquee tool to select a perspective 
plane. This deselects the pasted image so that it’s no longer a floating selection. 
To use the Stamp tool in Vanishing Point 
In  Vanishing Point, the  Stamp tool paints with sampled  pixels. The  cloned  image is oriented to the  perspective of the 
plane you’re painting in. The Stamp tool is useful for such tasks as blending and retouching image areas, cloning
portions of a surface to “paint out” an object, or cloning an image area to duplicate an object or extend a texture or
pattern.
With an image containing perspective planes open in Vanishing Point, select the Stamp tool
In the tool options area, set brush options for Diameter, Hardness, and Opacity.
Choose a Healing mode:
To paint without blending with the color, lighting, and shading of the surrounding pixels, choose Off. 
To paint and blend the strokes with the lighting of the surrounding pixels while retaining the color of the sampled 
pixels, choose Luminance. 
To paint and maintain the texture of the sampled image while blending with the colors, lighting, and shading of 
the surrounding pixels, choose On. 
Select Aligned to sample pixels continuously, without losing the current sampling point even when you release the 
mouse button. Deselect Aligned to continue using the sampled pixels from the initial sampling point each time you 
stop and resume painting. 
5
Move the pointer into a plane and Alt-click (Windows) or Option-click (Mac OS) to set the sampling point. 
6
Drag over the area of the image you want to paint. 
Using the Liquify filter 
The Liquify filter 
The Liquify filter lets you push, pull, rotate, reflect, pucker, and bloat any area of an image. The distortions you create 
can be subtle or drastic, which makes the Liquify command a powerful tool for retouching images as well as creating 
artistic effects. The Liquify filter can be applied to 8-bits-per-channel or 16-bits per-channel images.