Chapter 12. Drawing with Brushes, Shapes, and Other Tools
If you’re not artistically inclined, you may feel tempted to skip this chapter. After all, you probably just want to fix and enhance your photos—why should you care about brush technique? Surprisingly enough, you should care quite a lot.
In Elements, brushes aren’t just for painting a moustache and horns on a picture of someone you don’t like, or for blackening your sister’s teeth in that old school photo. Lots of Elements’ tools use brushes to apply their effects. So far, you’ve already run into the Selection brush, the Clone Stamp, and the Color Replacement brush, to name just a few. And even with the Brush tool, you can paint with lots of things besides color—like light or shadows, for example. In Elements, when you want to apply an effect in a precise manner, you often use some sort of brush to do it.
If you’re used to working with real brushes, their digital cousins can take some getting used to, but there are many serious artists now who paint primarily in Photoshop. With Elements, you get most of the same tools as in the full Photoshop, if not quite all the settings for each tool. Figure 12-1 shows an example of the detailed work you can do with Elements and some artistic ability.
Figure 12-1. This complex drawing by artist Jodi Frye was done entirely in Elements. If you learn to wield all of Elements’ drawing power, you ...
Get Photoshop Elements 10: The Missing Manual now with the O’Reilly learning platform.
O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.