![]() On the right are the Navigator which will show which portion of the image you are zoomed in on, for example. You can also change the background colour in case the colour of the subject is the same, perform the final Cut out, Change the Colour workspace or change the work window. Other brushes in your arsenal are an Eraser, a Blend brush which is a great tool for working with hair or fur, Patch tool to create an area over a particular part of the image to work in and gives a preview of what the cut out will look like, Forced edge tool which can be used to change or add a mask line by clicking areas where you want the line to go and double clicking to finish, Colour sampler which is generally used with images that have lattice work like a fence for instance and you can choose the colours to be blocked out without having to Delete the space manually, Preview, Clean tool for filling in small holes in the masked image, Select tool which selects patches and lines drawn using the forced edge tool, Hand tool to pan around the image when zoomed in and Zoom. Exact will either Keep or Delete the precise pixels you click on whereas Local will Keep or Delete the masked area that has been clicked on and Global will scan the image for pixels of the same colour and Keep or Delete those. The three types of brush are Exact, Local and Global. The green brushes are called the Keep brushes which will retain any parts of the image covered with that brush and the red ones are the Delete brushes which don't really need explaining. The top six are split into three different brushes of green and three red. On the workspace to the left are several tools which are dedicated to helping you create your masterpiece. If you are new to a program like this, there are three pages to the Image titled Source which is the original image, Workspace which is where you will work cutting the image out and Cut-out which will show the final image. Should you get confused by anything, the help screen on the website is very informative, easy to use and has tutorials for anything you may want to do. Loading the program is easy enough and once open, it is well laid out and easy to understand. If you have Photoshop, you can use Fluid Mask 3 as a plug in and version 3 is compatible with CS2 and CS3, but I decided to use it as a standalone program which is also possible. ![]() Vertus have always contested that it is not necessary and with version 3, it's faster than ever.įluid mask is on its third instalment and the upgraded version is now faster at working, blends edges better and has a Save settings feature for if you want to mask multiple images in a studio shoot for instance. All too often, it is easy to create a mask to copy an image over to paste two together and bits are missing or too much comes over and an hour of erasing is on the cards. ![]()
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