Adobe photoshop elements User Manual

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Chapter 7: Painting and Drawing
here are several tools you can use to paint 
and draw objects in Photoshop Elements. 
You can create different effects with the 
painting and drawing tools by customizing the 
options for each tool. You can also create and 
edit shapes using the shape tools. Other tools and 
commands let you transform and retouch 
an image.
About painting and drawing
When creating graphics on a computer, there is a 
distinction between painting and drawing.
Painting involves changing the colors of pixels 
using a painting tool. You can apply colors 
gradually, with soft edges and transitions, and 
manipulate individual pixels using powerful filter 
effects. When you use a painting tool, the color is 
applied to the currently selected layer.
Drawing involves creating shapes that are defined 
as geometric objects. For example, if you draw a 
circle using the ellipse tool, the circle is defined by 
a specific radius, location, and color. You can 
quickly select the entire circle and move it to a new 
location. When you use a drawing tool, a new layer 
is automatically created.
Using the painting tools
You can use the paintbrush, pencil, or airbrush to 
paint color on an image. The three tools create 
different effects:
The paintbrush tool creates soft strokes of color. 
The pencil tool creates hard-edged freehand 
lines.
The airbrush tool applies gradual tones 
(including sprays of color) to an image, simulating 
traditional airbrush techniques. The edges of the 
stroke are more diffused than those created with 
the paintbrush tool. The pressure setting for the 
airbrush tool controls how quickly the spray of 
paint is applied. If you hold down the mouse 
button without dragging, you can build up color.
To use a painting tool:
1
Specify a foreground color. (See “Choosing 
2
Select the paintbrush tool ( ), pencil tool ( ), 
or airbrush tool (
).
3
Click the inverted arrow ( ) next to the brush 
sample and choose a size for the brush from the 
pop-up palette menu in the options bar. To learn 
more about using pop-up palettes, see “Using 
pop-up palettes” on page 35.
If a brush is too large to fit in the palette, it appears 
as a smaller brush with a number indicating the 
actual diameter in pixels.
4
Specify a blending mode to control how 
painting affects existing pixels in the image. 
(See “Selecting a blending mode” on page 147.)
5
Specify opacity for the paintbrush or pencil 
T