Adobe ADBCD17648MC Manuel D’Utilisation

Page de 309
142
USING PHOTOSHOP ELEMENTS 8
Cropping, resizing, retouching, and transforming photos
Last updated 7/26/2011
Before and after using Healing Brush
1
Select the Healing Brush tool 
.
2
Choose a brush size from the options bar and set healing brush options:
Mode 
Determines how the source or pattern blends with existing pixels. Normal mode lays new pixels over the 
original pixels. Replace mode preserves film grain and texture at the edges of the brush stroke. 
Source 
Sets the source to use for repairing pixels. Sampled uses pixels from the current image. Pattern uses pixels from 
the pattern you specify in the Pattern panel. 
Aligned 
Samples pixels continuously without losing the current sampling point, even if 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. 
Sample All Layers 
Choose Sample All Layers to sample data from the current layer, the current layer and below, or all 
visible layers. 
3
Position the pointer in any open image and Option-click to sample data. 
Note: If you are sampling from one image and applying to another, both images must be in the same color mode unless 
one of the images is in Grayscale mode. 
4
Drag the image over the flaw to meld existing data with sampled data. The sampled pixels meld with the existing 
pixels each time you release the mouse button. 
If there is a strong contrast at the edges of the area you want to heal, make a selection before you use the Healing Brush 
tool. The selection should be bigger than the area you want to heal but should precisely follow the boundary of 
contrasting pixels. When you paint with the Healing Brush tool, the selection prevents colors from bleeding in from the 
outside. 
More Help topics 
Clone images or areas in an image
The Clone Stamp tool paints with an image sample, which you can use to duplicate objects, remove image 
imperfections, or paint over objects in your photo.