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I have Photoshop Cs2 and is wondering how do you do that.

2007-10-12 09:14:17 · 7 answers · asked by Andre R. 1 in Arts & Humanities Visual Arts Photography

7 answers

You need to get a book for the CS II and go through it learning CS2. The steps would take to long to type into a question like this. You would be working with layers or you can cut and paste into the same picture One black and white copy. Another color that you cut and past the color image into the black. There are other ways to do this as well.

Learn the software.

2007-10-12 09:19:29 · answer #1 · answered by Panama 4 · 0 0

I agree with the poster above. There is no one correct way to do that. But if you got yourself a copy of Photoshop and a book detailing the best techniques you'll be on your way.

Having said that, one method is to try the magic wand feature which automatically selects the part of the image you want to isolate based on finding similar colors and tones. It'll select the color you click on and a range similar tones near the area you clicked to an extent depending on the tolerance setting in the tool property bar. It works great if your background is in stark contrast to what you want to isolate.

You can play with the tool properties and tolerances to add and/or subtract from your selection until you have only the part you want to isolate selected. You may want to make sure the selection is feathered to a degree as well. Play with that setting and adjust to your tastes.

Once everything is selected just right you can invert the selection and desaturate. Everything other than your selection will go b&w. Then you just have to touch it up as you see fit.

There may be simpler methods that more advanced Photoshoppers can tell you about but that's worked for me.

2007-10-12 09:32:55 · answer #2 · answered by epeoples 1 · 0 0

Duplicate your image Layer. On the top Layer use the lasso tool to (roughly) select around the part you want to keep as colour. Once you've selected, Inverse your selection and delete the rest of the image (the part that will stay black and white).

Now click on the bottom Layer and switch the Mode to Grayscale (or Desaturate, it has the same effect).

If you need to clean up the edges of the colour, turn off the duplicate (black and white) Layer below and zoom in to the edges and clean up with a smallish eraser.

And there you go. Not that hard huh? :)

2007-10-12 09:38:52 · answer #3 · answered by †®€Åç∫€ 5 · 0 0

I do comparable issues like this at paintings known very almost it form of feels. In Photoshop: Use a selection gadget like Laso, Magic Wand, or Pen gadget to opt for the area you prefer to maintain in colour. Then Invert your determination. (cmd shift i) pass to the backside of your layers pallet the place it has a touch circle, click there and choose Channel Mixer. click on gray on the backside of the channel mixer window. enter 30-60-10 contained in the areas presented. click ok. this might make your inverted chosen area black and white- and it will save the unique chosen area colour. If there are different factors of the photograph you want returned in colour you in common terms click on the channel mixer layer, opt for a broom- positioned it on black or white, and paint over the area you want colour returned into and your unique photograph seems. What this technique does is it creates a mask over your photograph. this can furnish the possibility to cover or coach distinctive factors of a picture. once you employ an eraser gadget on a replica layer you're completely taking away the image and you will not have the skill to get it returned. maximum professional retouchers, like myself in common terms use the Channel Mixer technique because of the fact its secure and a hundred% effective. We use this for mag pictures and that i exploit it whilst doing positioned up production for wedding ceremony pictures. wish it is extremely not too perplexing- i'm not sure how plenty you realize approximately photoshop. it extremely is a sophisticated photoshop technique so enable me understand in case you opt for some help!

2016-10-06 14:04:49 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

There is an excellent book called "The Digital Photographer's Guide to Photoshop" by Scott Kelby. I have the Photoshop Elements version, and I use it all the time. It is by far the best Photoshop book I have ever seen.

2007-10-12 09:35:31 · answer #5 · answered by xfilesfan 7 · 0 0

Here's one of the simplest ways I know:

http://www.jimsdigitaldiary.com/colorizing.html

I created this tutorial just for all the people on this site who ask this question about ten times a week!

2007-10-12 09:34:30 · answer #6 · answered by Jim M 6 · 0 0

oh!!..kill me

2007-10-12 12:33:13 · answer #7 · answered by Eden 4 · 0 0

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