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Paint with sampled pixels in Vanishing Point
In Vanishing Point, the Stamp tool paints
with sampled pixels. The cloned image is oriented to the perspective
of the plane you’re painting in. The Stamp tool is useful for such
tasks as blending and retouching image areas, cloning portions of a
surface to “paint out” an object, or cloning an image area to duplicate
an object or extend a texture or pattern.
- In Vanishing Point, select the Stamp tool
.
- In the tool options area, set the Diameter (brush size),
Hardness (the amount of anti-aliasing on the brush), and Opacity
(the degree that the painting obscures or reveals the image beneath
it).
- Choose a blending mode from the Heal menu:
To prevent the strokes from blending with
the colors, shadows, and textures of the surrounding pixels, choose
Off.
To blend the strokes with the lighting of the surrounding
pixels, choose Luminance.
To blend the strokes with the color, lighting, and
shading of surrounding pixels, choose On.
- To determine the sampling behavior of the Stamp tool:
Select Aligned to sample pixels continuously,
without losing the current sampling point even when you release
the mouse button.
Deselect Aligned to continue using the sampled pixels
from the initial sampling point each time you stop and resume painting.
- (Optional) Specify the paint application options:
To paint continuously from one plane to
another, open the Vanishing Point menu and choose Allow Multi-Surface
Operations.
To confine painting to the active plane only, open
the Vanishing Point menu and choose Clip Operations To Surface Edges.
- Move the pointer into a plane and Alt-click (Windows)
or Option-click (Mac OS) to set the sampling point.
- Drag over the area of the image you want to paint. Hold
the Shift key down to drag a straight line that conforms to the
plane’s perspective. You can also click a point with the Stamp tool
and then Shift-click another point to paint a straight line in perspective.
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