Sun, Nov 24, 1:48 AM CST

Renderosity Forums / Photoshop



Welcome to the Photoshop Forum

Forum Moderators: Wolfenshire Forum Coordinators: Anim8dtoon

Photoshop F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 21 7:35 am)

Our mission is to provide an open community and unique environment where anyone interested in learning more about Adobe Photoshop can share their experience and knowledge, post their work for review and critique by their peers, and learn new techniques while developing the skills that allow each individual to realize their own unique artistic vision. We do not limit this forum to any style of work, and we strongly encourage people of all levels and interests to participate.

Are you up to the challenge??
Sharpen your Photoshop skill with this monthly challenge...

 

Checkout the Renderosity MarketPlace - Your source for digital art content!

 



Subject: An Outline Plug in


timbowling ( ) posted Sun, 05 January 2003 at 12:13 PM · edited Sat, 26 October 2024 at 12:22 PM

Attached Link: http://www.timbowling.com

Here's a plug in Ive always wanted. Does anyone know if it exists? If it doesn't it should. What I'd like it to do is outline a selection with a line of a color that you select. Off times when I am drawing on the computer I'll make selections of colored areas and wished I could have a traced line around it. I've tried a lot of plug ins I have, and they may claim to do it but they always mess with the interior color and I don't want that. Just a single line of a color or thickness I choose around the selected area. Right now I do it by hand, or draw it that way to begin with, but it takes so long.


JayPeG ( ) posted Sun, 05 January 2003 at 12:50 PM

You don't need a plug in for that, it's been built right into Photoshop for quite sometime.

Once your selection is made go to EDIT/STROKE

OR

Go to LAYER/LAYER STYLE/STROKE

Both of these will give you the option to run a line around your selection. You determine the thickness of the line, the color of the line and whether the line runs around the inside, outside or center of your selection. The first option adds it directly to the image. The second adds it as a layer effect so it's easier to make modifications to it if you want to. Of course the selected area has to be on it's own layer for that to work.

A different approach you can use if the selected are you want to ouline is on it's own layer is to have it selected and then go to SELECT/MODIFY/EXPAND. Place a layer behind the layer with your selection on it and fill it with color. Sometimes this can produce a smoother result than the stroke depending on how thick you want the outline to be.


timbowling ( ) posted Mon, 06 January 2003 at 12:42 PM

Thanks very much :) Works great, exactly what I needed. Funny I never saw that before.


Boxx ( ) posted Mon, 03 February 2003 at 4:44 AM

LOL! Easy when you know how. Incidentally, a useful trick for good outlines is the "Smart Blur" function. Copy the layer you need, desaturate it, and smart blur it with "outline only". Invert this and then you can overlay this on the original. I find it quite effective.


Privacy Notice

This site uses cookies to deliver the best experience. Our own cookies make user accounts and other features possible. Third-party cookies are used to display relevant ads and to analyze how Renderosity is used. By using our site, you acknowledge that you have read and understood our Terms of Service, including our Cookie Policy and our Privacy Policy.