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Today masks are about making portions of images transparent. Many of yesterday's masking jobs (stuff we learned in older applications) now gets done with selection tools. Today's masks are all about making portions of your image transparent to varying degrees. Granted, learning masks doesn't always feel intuitive or comfortable. Those stinking Menu commands barely hint at what the heck they actually do. Initially masks can confuse us, annoy us and scare those body fluids right out of us. But it's all worth it once we get past the initial hump. (that hump is a speed bump and not a mountain ... just slow down)
Can we cook Thanksgiving Dinner on a one burner hot plate? Sure, but a four burner stove & double oven is probably better.
isn't a sudden 'light bulb' kind of moment it's a gradual realization. If you get a little tense or frustrated, take a break to go read an
irreverent tutorial
for
but you really want to get this darn thing figured out once and for all, now to remove the phantom from the MASK_ |
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![]() Look at the Lettering in the image to note how it fades away at both ends. This was a simple operation using the PSP Mask editing feature and a layer containing a clan MacDonald plaid. In mask editing for the lettering layer, I made a selection of one side of the image, filled it with a black to white gradient, moved the selection and reversed the gradient, flood filled that side too and was done. Here it's got a black border incased in a box, but this method could very dramatically just fade off and disappear right into the background of your webpage.
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and can also see where we're working. |
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Checking View Mask is an insurance policy for confirming that you actually changed the image transparency. All image transparency changes must appear somewhere between ruby to pink as a see through indicator. If it looks transparent but isn't some shade of red to pink, that's layer transparency (a completely different animal) and you've gotten detoured down the wrong road with the wrong kind of transparency. Go ahead, paint some black on your image to confirm a red checkerboard is really there. (and then undo it) The more you see of the red color over your transparency checkerboard the less you see of your image and visa versa. 3 Select paintbrush Black blackens out the image to full transparency (invisible) so you will be painting black on images whenever you want something invisible. All the normal paintbrush tools will work.
Hey, when I paint black, it goes to
a red checkerboard and no image!
Notice the red of the mask is subdued and we can see the original image although it's become semi-transparent.
Make a freehand selection over another area and then use the Fill tool to fill it with a normal white to black gradient.
PSP6 tip You can mouseover the the mask icon on your palette to see your "painting for transparency" edits.
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Calm down, this is the normal procedure, even if we want to keep the effects we just added. We can choose to merge the current edited mask with the layer, or to discard the mask totally (A-bomb the mess I made, so I can start over.) So if you like your results say merge it, if not say delete it and start over again. There are other things that can be done, such as saving the mask while it's open to either the hard drive or the Alpha Channel, edit the mask as a selection, etc. Once you are comfortable with masks those concepts easily fall into place. What can we do with masks?
As you go along ... note why each step lists the things it does. |