1 How to Select Geometric Areas
Selecting geometric areas such as circles, ovals, and rectangles is a common Photoshop task. Reasons for selecting geometric areas include lightening an area to place text on it, deleting a section of the image, or preparing to crop the image.
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Open the File
Choose File, Open to open the desired file.
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Select the Marquee Tool
Select the Rectangular Marquee tool to draw a rectangular selection; select the Elliptical Marquee tool to draw an oval selection. (Other tools offer you the option of selecting a vertical or horizontal row of a single pixel.) To select any tool not currently visible in the toolbox, click and hold the current marquee tool and drag to the desired tool in the pop-out menu that appears. Note that the selected tool now appears on the toolbox button and in the Options bar at the top of the screen.
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Drag the Selection
Move the cursor onto the image and click and drag to draw the selection. If the selection is not where you want it, click once outside the selection to deselect the area, and drag to redraw the selection.
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Move the Selection as Needed
After you create the selection, you can move the selection area (the ellipse or the rectangle, for example) to another area in the image. With the Marquee tool still selected, click inside the active selection and drag to move its location.
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Deselect as Necessary
If you need to deselect the area and start over, choose Select, Deselect to deactivate the current selection. You also can deactivate a selection by clicking outside the selected area or by pressing +D (Mac users) or Ctrl+D (Windows users) when using any of the marquee tools.
How to Modify Selections
To select complex shapes and areas, you must sometimes combine multiple selection methods. Adding or subtracting from a selection is only the beginning. You also can shrink or grow a selection, smooth out sharp corners, and tweak or skew the selection area in any direction. This task shows the top 12 shortcuts for working with selections. Combine them as you see fit to select exactly the right area of your image.
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Adding to Selections
To add to a selection, hold the Shift key as you're using any of the Photoshop selection tools. Alternatively, you can also click the Add To Selection button in the Options bar. A plus sign appears next to the cursor to show that you're adding to the current selection.
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Subtracting from Selections
To subtract from a selection, hold the Option key (Mac users) or Alt key (Windows users) as you're using any of the Photoshop selection tools. Alternatively, you can click the Subtract from Selection button in the Options bar. A minus sign appears next to the cursor to show that you're subtracting from the current selection.
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Intersecting Selections
With an area selected, it's possible to create a second, overlapping area that leaves only the common, intersecting area selected. First, select an area. Then press Shift+Option (Mac users) or Shift+Alt (Windows users) as you draw a second selection that overlaps the first. An x appears next to the cursor as you do this. After you release the mouse and the keyboard keys, only the intersecting area remains selected.
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Nudging a Selection
After you select an area, you can nudge the selection area up, down, left, or right one pixel at a time. Select one of the Marquee tools in the toolbox and press the arrow keys on your keyboard.
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Inverting Selections
To invert an active selection, choose Select, Inverse. This action selects the exact opposite of the current selection. In this example, after you select the menu command, everything on the image area will be selected except the rectangle that's currently selected.
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Smoothing Selections
Smoothing a selection involves a gradual rounding of corners or sharp edges. To smooth an active selection, choose Select, Modify, Smooth. In the Smooth Selection dialog box that appears, enter a value from 1 to 16 pixels to determine the degree of smoothing. Click OK to modify the selection. Repeat this step as desired to smooth the selection even more.
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Expanding Selections
Expanding a selection means just what it says: expanding the overall area of a selection by a specific number of pixels. To expand an active selection, choose Select, Modify, Expand. In the Expand Selection dialog box that appears, enter a value from 1 to 16 pixels to determine the degree of expansion. Click OK to modify the selection. Repeat this step as desired to expand the selection even more.
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Contracting Selections
Contracting a selection makes the overall selection area smaller. To contract an active selection, choose Select, Modify, Contract. In the Contract Selection dialog box that appears, enter a value from 1 to 16 pixels. Click OK to modify the selection. Repeat this step to contract the selection even more.
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Isolating Selection Borders
When you're working with geometric selections, there may be times when you want to apply an effect only to the broder of a selected area. Choose Select, Modify, Border. In the Border dialog box that appears, enter a value from 1 to 16 pixels to specify the width of the border. This option thickens the selection line to the width you specify and makes that line the active selection area. Click OK to modify the selection.
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Feathering a Selection
Feathering a selection involves vignetting the selection edges, softening any effects that are applied to the selected area. To feather a selection, enter a pixel value in the Feather field of the Options bar. Alternatively, choose Select, Feather. In the Feather Selection dialog box that appears, type a feather value from 0.2 to 250 pixels and click OK.
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Selecting Similar Colors
After you select an area, you can select all other pixels in the image that have the same color value. This capability can be effective if you want to select multiple colored objects or areas. To do this, select a color or range of colors, and then choose Select, Similar. All pixels with similar pixel values are selected.
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Transforming Selections
You can to transform an active selection, choose Select, Transform Selection. A bounding box appears around the selection; drag the handles to modify the selection area. Double-click inside the bounding box or click the Move tool and then click OK to apply the transformation.