This tool reminds me of the old extract/cutout tools, where you drew and outline around your subject and clicked on the areas outside the outline to exclude them from the mask, and the areas inside the outline to include them. How well does the Exposure X7 Selection tool work? Photo by Levi Ventura on Unsplash (12) Then I copied the mask and applied it to a new layer where I inverted it so that the sky was masked and I could apply a darker tone, a white balance shift and some noise reduction. (11) I created a Selection on the base layer to select the aircraft to make it brighter and with a warmer tone. Just below, you might be able to see a small ‘include’ marker. (10) For this image layer I’ve applied a mask to the sky to change its colors and tones. (9) Show Mask is useful while you’re creating and editing the selection and refining its edges. (8) Not sure what the Suppress Noise slider does, but the Feathering slider can help blend in masks where the object outline is quite soft. (7) There are Color Constraints I haven’t tried yet for controlling the tones and colors affected by the mask. I had some but limited success with this. The Expand slider makes the whole polygon bigger or smaller, while the Matting slider apparently pushes the mask edge out towards the edges the selection to reduce or eliminate fine lines around shapes. (6) You do have some control over edge blending. (5) You can set the Base Width for the whole selection polygon with the slider above, or select individual polygon points to change the width of specific segments. (4) You can use this menu to find and select the polygon masks and markers you’ve created. ![]() (3) There are five buttons: two polygons tools to include or exclude the area inside the polygon, an include or exclude marker and freehand edge tool for when it’s quicker than trying to create a polygon. Click on it to show the new Selection tools below. (2) The new Selection tool joins the Brush and Gradient tools already in Exposure X. (1) To access Exposure X’s masking tools you click this ‘brush’ icon. Exposure X7’s new Selection tool explained You can click on this image to see a larger version. The new Selection tool has a lot of hidden depths which are not obvious straight away. Here’s an annotated screenshot which shows the key controls and explains what they are used for. ![]() ![]() The third interesting thing is that this masking tool is non-destructive – it’s saved with the image but you can come back at any time to modify it. The second is that there are ‘Marker’ tools for further refining areas which should be included in the mask and those which should be excluded, and these are just part of a whole series of refinements you can apply. The first is that you only have to create rough outlines – Exposure X7 will then use its own intelligent algorithms to fill the mask and trace the object’s outline. There are three things in particular that make this new tool interesting. You use an adjustable polygon tool to roughly outline the object you want to separate, then use further refinements and adjustments to make the selection as accurate as possible. It sounds familiar, but Exposure X7’s approach is powerful, controllable and has real hidden depths. Photo by Levi Ventura on UnsplashĮxposure X7, just launched, has a new Selection tool that can follow the outlines of complex objects with little effort. Here’s a before-and-after comparison – Exposure X7’s new Selection tool is especially powerful and effective with clearly defined subjects that have hard edged outlines.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |