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ADOBE PHOTOSHOP ELEMENTS 9

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USING <strong>PHOTOSHOP</strong> <strong>ELEMENTS</strong> 9<br />

Painting<br />

229<br />

More Help topics<br />

“About brush options” on page 233<br />

Use the Smudge tool<br />

The Smudge tool simulates the actions of dragging a finger through wet paint. The tool picks up color where the stroke<br />

begins and pushes it in the direction you drag. You can smudge existing colors in your image, or smear foreground<br />

color on the image.<br />

Original image (left), and after smudging parts of the photo (right)<br />

1 In the Edit workspace, select the Smudge tool in the toolbox. (If you don’t see it in the toolbox, select either the<br />

Blur tool or the Sharpen tool , and then click the Smudge tool icon in the options bar.)<br />

2 Set options in the options bar, and then drag within the image to smudge color.<br />

To temporarily use the Finger Painting option as you drag with the smudge tool, press the Alt key (Option key in Mac<br />

OS).<br />

You can specify any of the following Smudge tool options:<br />

Brushes Sets the brush tip. Click the arrow next to the brush sample, choose a brush category from the Brushes pop-up<br />

menu, and then select a brush thumbnail.<br />

Size Sets the size of the brush in pixels. Drag the Size pop-up slider or enter a size in the text box.<br />

Mode Specifies how the paint that you apply blends with the existing pixels in the image. See “About blending modes”<br />

on page 219 for more information.<br />

Strength Sets the amount of the smudge effect.<br />

Sample All Layers Smudges using color from all visible layers. If this option is deselected, the smudge tool uses colors<br />

from only the active layer.<br />

Finger Painting Smears the foreground color at the beginning of each stroke. If this option is deselected, the smudge<br />

tool uses the color under the pointer at the beginning of each stroke.<br />

More Help topics<br />

“Understanding layers” on page 57<br />

“About brush options” on page 233<br />

Last updated 1/27/2011

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