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Adobe Photoshop Help
Drawing
Using Help
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Tolerance values can range from 0.5 to 10 pixels and determine how sensitive the Make
Work Path command is to slight changes in the selection shape. The higher the tolerance
value, the fewer the anchor points used to draw the path and the smoother the path. If the
path is used as a clipping path and you have problems printing the image, use a higher
tolerance value. (See
“Printing image clipping paths” on page 467
.)
3
Click OK. The path appears at the bottom of the Paths palette.
Adding color to paths (Photoshop)
You can add color values to a path by filling or stroking it. Filling a path is the same as
creating a rasterized shape using the shape tools. (See
“Creating rasterized shapes” on
page 202
.)
Filling paths with color
The Fill Path command lets you fill a path with pixels using a specified color, a state of the
image, a pattern, or a fill layer.
Important:
When you fill a path, the color values appear on the active layer. Make sure the
layer you want is active before beginning. You cannot fill a path when a layer clipping
mask or text layer is active.
To fill a path using the current Fill Path settings:
1
Select the path in the Paths palette.
2
Click the Fill Path button at the bottom of the Paths palette.
To fill a path and specify options:
1
Select the path in the Paths palette.
2
Fill the path:
•
Alt-click (Windows) or Option-click (Mac OS) the Fill Path button at the bottom of the
Paths palette.
•
Alt-drag (Windows) or Option-drag (Mac OS) the path to the Fill Path button.
•
Choose Fill Path from the Paths palette menu. If the selected path is a path component,
this command changes to Fill Subpath.
3
For Use, choose the contents for the fill. (See
“Filling and stroking selections and layers”
on page 249
.)
4
Specify an opacity for the fill. To make the fill more transparent, use a low percentage. A
setting of 100% makes the fill opaque.
5
Choose a blending mode for the fill. (See
“Selecting a blending mode” on page 241
.)
The Mode list includes a Clear mode that lets you erase to transparency. You must be
working in a layer other than the background to use this option.
6
Choose Preserve Transparency to limit the fill to layer areas that contain pixels. (See
“Locking layers” on page 290
.)
7
Select a Rendering option:
•
Feather Radius to define how far inside and outside the selection border the feather
edge extends. Enter a value in pixels.