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Results 1 to 3 of 3
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16th December 2005, 02:59 PM #1
any hints for removing background in a digital photo
I am using an old family photo as a lesson in playing around with Macromedia Fireworks.
I normally just deal with fairly regular shapes and can remove the background fairly easily, particularly becasue I try to take the photos against a background of fairly uniform colour. I usually deal with products not external scenes.
This is my first attempt at dealing with people against an exterior at Port Arthur. There is a lot of contrast and many colours and shades and I cant get a good edge.
So far I have tended to use the magic wand tool for large expanses of a single colour and then trim with the eraser tool, but it looks really crappy.
Is there a common technique that is used for doing this? Perhaps the lasso, but it would requires hundreds and hundreds of points to define the edge.
Clint
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16th December 2005, 03:03 PM #2
I would just use a block eraser tool to remove the bulk of it, then whip around the edges with an airbrush-shaped eraser. Sometimes I run the blurry finger around to smudge the edges a bit.
"I don't practice what I preach because I'm not the kind of person I'm preaching to."
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17th December 2005, 05:13 AM #3
Lasso tool... but in photoshop tho, you can hold the shift/alt keys for "add too" or "minus from" the selected area.
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