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is there a file that come with photoshop that has different faces in it?

2007-05-07 15:20:42 · 2 answers · asked by serene 1 in Computers & Internet Software

i mean people's faces, sorry

2007-05-14 07:46:00 · update #1

2 answers

What do you mean by "faces"? Do you mean type faces, which are the various different fonts for letters and symbols? Or are you asking how you can use Photoshop to put a different person's face on someone's body? Both can be done but the procedures are very different. Please clarify and I will try to help.

Edit:

Okay, the simplest way to use Photoshop to replace one part of an image with another is called the "Clone" tool, which looks like a rubberstamp in the Tool tray on the left. Click on the Clone tool in the Tool tray. If you don't have the Tool tray on your screen, go up to the Window menu at the top of the screen and click. In the dropdown window, click on Tools to add a check mark. It's probably near the bottom.

Put a picture on the screen that has a couple of people in it. Once the picture is loaded, click on the Clone tool (it looks like a little rubberstamp, remember?). Once you've selected the Clone tool, hold down the "Alt" key on your keyboard and click once on the center of the face that you want to paste over the other face. Release the Alt key. Go to the other face and hold down the left mouse button as you move the pointer over the face. The first face will appear over the second face.

If you don't like the way it is going, hold down the "Cntl" key and press "Z" -- that will undo what you have done.

Practice the Clone tool and you'll find it is very powerful.. I use it all the time to "airbrush" images.

2007-05-14 05:49:41 · answer #1 · answered by pvreditor 7 · 4 0

Photoshop Element will do almost everything you can do on Gimp. The biggest differences between Elements and CS5 is the ability to automate a lot of processes. This is useful for pros who have to repeat the same steps over and over on thousands of images, but it doesn't typically justify the price difference for amateurs. Other differences included things like Content Aware Fill, which is one of the best advancements to Photoshop ever. Features like that are not available on Elements yet, but probably will be on a later version. I prefer CS5 because it can run on 64-bit operating systems and take advantage of the 6GB of RAM I have on my computer when working with enormous files. There is not a 64-bit version of elements and there probably will not be in the future. That means you are limited to around 2-3GB of RAM for the software.

2016-05-17 23:29:48 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

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