Adobe photoshop cs2 사용자 설명서

다운로드
페이지 815
374 
ADOBE PHOTOSHOP CS2 
User Guide 
In the options bar, select the way you want to change the color. 
• 
Saturate to intensify the color’s saturation 
• 
Desaturate to dilute the color’s saturation
Specify the flow for the Sponge tool.
Drag over the part of the image you want to modify.
See also 
Vanishing Point 
About Vanishing Point 
Vanishing Point is a feature that lets you make perspective-correct edits in images that contain perspective planes— 
for instance, the sides of a building or any rectangular object. Using Vanishing Point, you specify the planes in an 
image, and then apply edits such as painting, cloning, copying or pasting, and transforming. All your edits honor the 
perspective of the plane you’re working in. With Vanishing Point, you’re no longer retouching an image as if all its 
contents are on a single flat plane facing you. Instead, you’re working dimensionally on the perspective planes in the 
image. When you use Vanishing Point to retouch, add, or remove content in an image, the results are more realistic 
because the edits are properly oriented and scaled to the perspective planes. 
Making edits on the perspective planes in an image 
To use Vanishing Point, you open the Vanishing Point dialog box (choose Filter > Vanishing Point), which contains 
tools for defining the perspective planes, tools for editing the image, and an image preview that you work in. You first 
specify the perspective planes in the preview image, and then you can paint, clone, copy, paste, and transform content 
in the planes. The Vanishing Point tools (Marquee, Stamp, Brush, and others) behave similarly to their counterparts 
in the main Photoshop toolbox. You can even use the same keyboard shortcuts to set the tool options.