Tutorial Tuesday (Photoshop Elements)

Quick Trick: Smart Brush Tool

The Smart Brush Tool was introduced in Elements 9 – a long time ago. But I only just played with it for the first time and was suitably impressed. So let’s talk about it. The Tool combines the Quick Selection (Magic Wand) feature with LOTS of options and allows you to apply special effects easily and precisely. My example took me about 2 minutes, so it can also be really quick. Some of the All-Purpose menu options are Blue Skies (turns gray skies blue!), Brighten, Increase Contrast, Darken, Make Lips Red and Whiten Teeth. There are several other menus, including Artistic, Black and White, Color, Lighting, Nature, Photography, Portrait, Reverse Effects, Special Effects, Texture and Tint. Each has multiple options in the submenu and I plan to try some of those out ASAP. So how does it work?

This photo is cute, but the puppy is underexposed, thanks to the bright snowy background. Adjusting the photo’s lighting as a whole would require several steps and multiple tweaks to achieve a good result. Let’s try out the Smart Brush All Purpose Brighten and see what it does.

The first thing I noticed is that the adjustments are made in real time – right on the screen. The change is visible in the screenshot! This is the whole workspace; I’ll add some close-ups below. I rolled the Brush over the puppy, not taking any great care. The red outline is simply to remind me that there are marching ants in the screenshot you can’t actually see. If I wanted to make the Selection more accurate, I could, using the options shown in the second close-up below. The effect is applied to a Layer Mask, not the actual photo. That means you can make even more adjustments by adjusting the Opacity or changing the Blend Mode.

Here’s a better look at the details. That coloured illustration is your Menu Picker; the little inverted triangle activates it. The Brush Size slider can be moved at any time during the Selection process, so you can save tweaking later.

You can also flip between the BIG Brush and the Detail Brush while you’re making your Selection. The stack of Brush icons on the right tell you what the Brush will do. The top one is for basic Selection. The one with the + sign ADDS to the Selection and the bottom one SUBTRACTS from the Selection – like an eraser.

If you want even more brightening it’s as simple as making a Copy of the Layer Mask [CTRL/CMD>J] then tinkering with the Opacity.

Here are the three versions: the original, after one Smart Brush Brightening and after I Copied the Layer Mask. For the final version, I decreased the Layer Mask Opacity to 29%. And it literally took less than 2 minutes! I didn’t fiddle with the Selection by outlining all the tufts of hair or Refining the Edge, and the outcome is acceptable for casual use. I could redo it with more attention to detail if I wanted it to be zoomable, but for this tut, I think it’s just fine.

Should I show you some of the other possibilities in future tutorials?

I hope this has provided some distraction from the goings-on in the news these days. Keep your chins up!

 

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