You can use the Quick Selection tool in Photoshop to easily select and edit specific parts of a photo. Once you've made your selection, you can delete or edit that section without affecting the rest ...
You can use the Quick Selection tool in Photoshop to easily select and edit specific parts of a photo. Once you've made your selection, you can delete or edit that section without affecting the rest ...
Pixelmator Team on Thursday updated its namesake Mac image editor with two new selection tools, and a Retouch extension for Apple's OS X Photos app. The Quick Selection tool in v3.5 lets users "paint" ...
Photoshop used to be synonymous with photo editing, but Pixelmator is also making a name for itself and without the Adobe price tag. And the mobile version isn’t lagging too far behind its Mac ...
Photoshop is the gold standard of image-editing apps—and it’s priced to match, with a $10/month Creative Cloud Photography Plan the cheapest way to buy it. On the other end of the price spectrum, ...
Pixelmator, the incredible image editing app for Mac and iOS, now ships with a useful Photos extension on OS X that allows you to make quick edits to your images without leaving Apple’s app. The ...
Isolating objects in Photoshop can be a painstaking process. If you want to select simple objects, the marquee or lasso tools will get the job done quickly. But if you're working on a complex subject, ...
The new Pixelmator update, 3.5 Canyon, brings Quick Selection and Magnetic Selection tools, as well as a Retouch Extension for the Mac’s Photos app. The new Quick Selection Tool is designed to make ...
Following an update to the Mac app with similar features, the Pixelmator team has released version 2.3 for iPhone and iPad. Download Pixelmator in the iOS App Store ($4.99). This update brings the ...
Selecting an object inside Photoshop may soon only require a few clicks instead of tedious outlines and masking. On the heels of the Select Subject Tool, Adobe teased ...
Last year, Photoshop introduced a tool called ‘Select Subject’ that made it super simple to select a primary subject from an image – or at least give you a decent starting point. Problem was, this ...