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Adobe Photoshop Tip– Attack of the iPod People

iPod People, iCharacters, silhouettes–whatever you call them, they are those cool people who dance around in the iPod TV commercials and show up in the posters and billboards you might have seen around town and I’m going to show you how to make your own in Photoshop CS (this tutorial will work in other versions but will require some digging on your own to find out how).

Prep 1: Choose a picture

lillaura Adobe Photoshop Tip   Attack of the iPod People
You’re going to need a photo of someone or something to iPodify and it should be reasonably high in resolution and size and should be in either RGB or CMYK mode. The picture I’m using here (used with the gracious permission of its subject, the lovely, brilliant and talented MacHottie from Inside Mac Radio and camera phone girl, Laura Burstein (read her blog)) is 1280 x 1707 pixels which works out to 4.25″ x 5.5ish” at 300 ppi.

(Thanks for the pic, Laura!!!)

There are several elements to a silhouette poster and each of them should be considered when choosing a picture:

skitched 20070815 143724 Adobe Photoshop Tip   Attack of the iPod People

  1. Action: Your subject should be doing something. Even though this will be a still image, your subject should be doing something interesting. While many iPod users listen to their music while waiting for the bus, I have yet to see an iPod ad depicting a silhouetted form just standing around looking down the road for the 3 o’clock to downtown. Find a shot that looks dynamic. See above how Laura is striking a “Charlie’s Angels” pose?
  2. The iPod: Now I’m not saying you have to have a shot with someone holding an iPod–not at all. But in order to really sell your finished image as an homage to the iPod silhouette ads, your subject should have something about them to highlight–something that takes on the importance of the iPod in your image.
  3. Detail: One of the most common mistakes I’ve seen in tutorials showing how to replicate the iPod ad style is that they make the silhouette a true silhouette when, if you look at the ads, the people actually do show detail…not a lot…it’s really dark…but it’s there. So if you’ve attempted to simplify the process by shooting a silhouette that shows only a hard outline of your subject with a solid black fill within, you’ve probably gone too far.
  4. Depth (optional): If your subject is going to be shown from head to toe (assuming it’s a person), you will have to consider that we will be adding a cast shadow that will place your subject in the three dimensional iPod universe making it all seem a bit more “real.” You’ll want to allow for that shadow by adding canvas space to your image before we get to deep into the tutorial. As indicated, this is optional since some images will be head and shoulder shots that do not show the floor or, quite possibly, you could be making an iPod silhouette of some kind of supernatural being like a vampire and therefore a shadow would not be necessary.

Prep 2: Choose a color

Once you’ve got your picture chosen, you’ll want to choose a color. A silhouette is nothing without a vibrant background by which to be silhouetted. The semi-somewhat-official iPod poster palette of colors goes something like this:

Sample
Color
CMYK
RGB
Pink
9 – 83 – 12 – 0
235 – 82 – 150
Orange
5 – 51 – 100 – 0
245 – 145 – 16
Yellow
13 – 24 – 100 – 0
231 – 171 – 0
Green
43 – 6 – 95 – 0
164 – 201 – 60
Blue
78 – 34 – 0 – 0
0 – 148 – 224
Purple
42 – 69 – 8 – 0
164 – 106 – 168

Which one should you choose? I dunno, try them all! As you will soon see the changing the color is the easy part of this tutorial.

Step 1: Ready the Canvas

Open the picture you plan to use. If this is a prized portrait, you might want to open a copy instead… unless you’d like to forever remember your child’s first steps as having taken place in the iPod universe.

Okay, so once you’ve opened your chosen picture, have a look at how much background you have. We may be adding a shadow so add some canvas to your image if it is cropped tight to the subject. If the image is cropped into the subject (i.e. parts of your future iPod person’s body are out of the picture and chopped off) then don’t bother adding more canvas…there’s not much you can do unless you want to artfully paint in the cropped-off bits. My picture of Laura has enough background for me to add a shadow later, so I won’t be adding any.

Step 2: Color

Add a new layer for your background color. Name the layer “Colored
background” and fill it with the color you chose in Prep 2. If you
could not narrow your color choice down to a single hue, make a separate
layer for each color you wish to test out. If you haven’t already, write
the mix for one of your colors on a slip of paper.

coloredbackground Adobe Photoshop Tip   Attack of the iPod People

Step 3: Extracting your subject

Duplicate the layer your subject is on (most likely the “Background” layer) and arrange that layer on top of your Colored Background layer(s). Name this layer “Sacrificial Layer”. Duplicate the Sacrificial Layer and arrange its clone at the top of the Layers palette (it’s probably already there). Name this layer “iPod person”. Now, make sure the “Sacrificial Layer” is selected in the Layers palette. Here comes the tricky part:

Disclaimer:»

Go Filter>Extract…

Now you will be faced with the Extract filter interface. The Extract filter is a “destructive” filter that, with your help, will extract (thus the name) your subject from its background. What I mean by “destructive” is that once you have gone through the trouble of getting this filter to do all it can to isolate your iPod Person and have clicked “Ok”, the effect it has on the layer is no longer editable. It does not create a layer mask or clipping path–it deletes pixels. This is why I had you create the “Sacrificial Layer” and why we are applying the Extract filter to that layer and not the “iPod Person” layer.

The other scary thing about the Extract filter is that it is darned near impossible to teach in a text based tutorial like this. I had planned on writing a Photoshop Quick Tip explaining how to use this filter, but the tip soon exceeded the boundaries of what any rational person would classify as “quick.” So the best I can do for the time being is to give you the steps involved and the purposes of those steps:

  1. highlightedandfilled Adobe Photoshop Tip   Attack of the iPod PeopleHighlighting:
    The Edge Highlighter tool (looks like a fat felt tip marker) shows Photoshop the “border zone.” You’ll draw along the edge of your subject-like an outline. But, unlike an outline you need to draw about equally inside the edge and outside. The mark you make with this tool tells Photoshop, “Somewhere in the stroke of this line is where the edge is.” So if your subject has a hazy edge, you’re going to want to use a bigger brush size. But keep in mind: the finer the outline the better.Make sure your finished outline is a closed shape or that it starts and ends at the image’s edge. Also be sure to outline anywhere the background shows through within the outer border–such as if your subject has his hands on his hips looking heroic, he’ll have background showing through under his arms (unless he’s wearing a cape). I have a few areas like this around the left side of Laura’s face where her hair goes behind her shoulder a bit.

    You can use the Eraser tool (looks like an eraser …duh) to rub out any mistake you might make in highlighting. Holding down the Option key while using the Edge Highlighter tool also serves as an eraser.

    If you’re feeling really keen, you can try out “Smart Highlighting” which promises to follow the edge as you draw and even choose an appropriate brush width. It actually does a pretty good job and I highly recommend giving it a test drive. Smart Highlighting can be accessed by clicking the checkbox on the right side of the Extract filter interface or by holding down the Command key while using the Edge Highlighter tool. It can be a great time saver but can’t handle fine detail or low contrast edges very well.

  2. Filling: Once you’ve highlighted the border zone, you’re going to have to tell Photoshop which side of the border you want to keep. Click the Fill tool (looks like a paint bucket) inside the border where you want Photoshop to save your subject from its background.\If the Fill tool spilled paint where you didn’t want it to, just click again in the same spot and it will remove the fill. Then you can grab the Highlight tool again and draw in the open spot where the paint flowed out and try again.
  3. extractinterface Adobe Photoshop Tip   Attack of the iPod PeoplePreviewing:
    Once you feel you have mastered Highlighting and Filling, look down at the bottom of the setting on the right hand side of the window and set the Display setting to “Other…” A color picker will pop up. Go ahead and enter in the values of the color you wrote down in step 2. Click the “Preview” button in the top right corner of the Extract filter window and let Photoshop have a crack at extracting based on your instructions.Once Photoshop is done attempting to extract your subject form its background, you may be completely disappointed with this filter. Is the subject in your original photo on a background that is very busy or similar in color to the subject? That will make it tough. If so, go to the Preview settings and set Show to “Original” and check both the “Show Highlight” and “Show Fill” boxes and you’ll be back to before the preview. Now check the “Textured Image” box in the Extraction settings above the Preview settings you just adjusted. Try clicking the Preview button again and see if the results are any better. If not, we’ll just have to make do somehow. There is more tweaking ahead still.
  4. Cleanup and Edge Touchup: The Cleanup tool (looks like a paint brush on a square with circle inside it) will allow you to softly erase parts of the extracted image or, by holding down the Option key, paint them back in. You should go around the perimeter of your subject and make sure all his or her bits are still intact.If the problems lie more with the smoothness of the edges than the accuracy, use the Edge Touchup tool (looks like a fat felt tip marker on a square with circle inside it) to smooth out the roughness. You can even hold down the Command key while using it to smudge the edge to your liking.You are free at this stage to jump between the Cleanup and Edge Touchup tools, but any tweaking using the Highlighter tool or Fill tool will nullify anything you have worked for since clicking Preview. So, work at refining that edge, because once you’re done this, click “OK” and apply your extraction.

Man, that was like pulling teeth!

Once your Extraction has applied, Command-Click the Sacrificial Layer and select the iPod Person layer in the Layers palette. Go Layer>Add Layer Mask>Reveal Selection. You may now delete the Sacrificial Layer.

maskediting Adobe Photoshop Tip   Attack of the iPod PeopleNow, with the layer mask of the iPod Person layer selected in the Layers palette, edit the mask to further refine the extraction. I like using the Smudge tool to smoosh the edge of the extraction a tiny bit so that they don’t look pixelated. This process will allow you to edit out any rough spots or refine any details that you missed or couldn’t get right in the Extract filter window.

You might even want to the Channels palette, click the eye next to the iPod Person Mask to the “on” position and turn off the eye next to RGB (or CMYK). This will allow you to look at just the mask and make sure it doesn’t have any black or white greeblies in places where they don’t belong. The Extract filter often leaves these things strewn about the highlight area and, though they may be difficult to see now, they will come back to haunt us later. Once you’re done, click the image thumbnail of the iPod Person layer.

Step 4: Paint it Black

As lovely as Laura looks, in order to complete this tutorial we are going to have to reduce her to little more than a silhouette–that is, after all, the point of this tutorial. But just in case we need to backtrack, lets silhouette a duplicate layer:

Duplicate the iPod Person layer and name it Silhouette. Click the preview eye next to the iPod Person layer “off.” Set the Silhouette layer’s blending mode to multiply and then go Image>Adjustments>Hue/Saturation and drag the Saturation slider all the way to the left. This will give Saturation a value of -100. Click OK.

levels Adobe Photoshop Tip   Attack of the iPod People Now, go Image>Adjustments>Levels and enter in a value of 158 in the first field on the Input Levels.
lauradark Adobe Photoshop Tip   Attack of the iPod People You should now see an effect similar to what I’ve shown you here on the left. Duplicate the Silhouette layer as many times as it takes to achieve the darker look you see here on the right. You don’t want to see too much of the subject’s face, in fact, I should probably go a bit darker with Laura here. You also want to watch that you don’t go so dark that you don’t see any detail, so go slow and don’t be afraid to use the Layer Opacity sliders. lauradarker Adobe Photoshop Tip   Attack of the iPod People

Step 5: Put in the Pod

Whether your image has an actual iPod or not, there should be at least one item you spotlight as playing the roll of the iPod in this, your homage to the iPod ads.

To do this, we will create a new layer filled with white and set its blending mode to Multiply. Make sure it is on top of all the others. Don’t bother naming it, we’ll be deleting it in a second.

We will click the preview eyes next to the Background layer and any and all Color Background layers to the “off” position. This should leave us with nothing but the Silhouette layers showing and multiplied only over themselves.

Go Select>All and then Edit>Copy Merged. This will copy the state of the selected area of the Photoshop document as it is currently displayed as if it had its layers merged–very handy feature to have around.

With the topmost layer selected, go Edit>Paste. Now you can delete that white layer.

threshold Adobe Photoshop Tip   Attack of the iPod PeopleName your newly pasted layer “iPod” and, with it selected, go Image>Adjustments>Threshold. Adjust the Threshold Level slider until as much of the object’s details are shown without it being overly white or overly black–we want the iPod in the image to be simplified. Mine came in at about 187. Click OK when you’re done.

Now, go Filter>Stylize>Diffuse… and choose the Anisotropic Mode.

Then, go Image>Adjustments>Levels and set the first field in the Output Levels to 170 and click OK.

Next, go Layer>Add Layer Mask>Hide All.

Turn the preview eye next to your Colored Background layer back on but leave the layer mask of the iPod layer highlighted in the Layers palette because next you’ll want to use the Brush tool to paint in the iPod.

ipodinplace Adobe Photoshop Tip   Attack of the iPod People

BONUS POINTS

Side Note: click to read» Step 6: Cast shadow …a tutorial in itself

(skip this if your subject is not seen in contact with the floor)

If you noticed in the picture of the girl dancing on the green background I showed in Step 1, she not only has an iPod shuffle, but she also has a shadow being cast on the floor at her feet. These can be tough to do, but really add a nice touch of depth to the image.

The trick here is that we need to create a separate shadow for almost every point at which our subject touches the ground. That will mean two for me because I can fudge the front and heel of each of Laura’s shoes into one contact point pretty convincingly.

You will need to do the following for each point of contact your subject makes with the floor:

  1. castshadow1 Adobe Photoshop Tip   Attack of the iPod PeopleDecide which contact point on which you will focus for this shadow.
  2. Create a new layer filled with white with the blending mode set to Multiply and an Opacity of 50%.
  3. With this layer selected, Command-click the layer mask of a Silhouette layer. This will give you a selection in the shape of your subject.
  4. Using the Rectangular Marquee tool and while holding down the Option key, draw selection boxes around any of the places where your subject makes contact with the floor other than the place you decided to focus on in the first step of this procedure. This will isolate just the contact point you are focusing on.
  5. Go Select>Transform Selection.
  6. With your mouse, move the Reference Point (the little cross-hair inside the Transform Selection bounding box) to the point or edge at which your subject touches the floor.
  7. In the Options bar at the top of the screen enter the following values:transform Adobe Photoshop Tip   Attack of the iPod PeopleW: 100%, H: 30%, Angle: 0.0°, H: 75° and V: 0.0° — don’t change the X and Y values at all. Hit Enter to set your values and Enter again to apply them to the selection.
  8. Fill your transformed selection with Black. Deselect.
  9. Go Layer>Add Layer Mask>Reveal All.
  10. Reset your Foreground and Background colors (hit the D key).
  11. Use the Gradient tool set with a Foreground to Background Linier Gradient in Normal Mode at 100% with no Reversal, Dither or Transparency.
  12. Click and hold the Gradient Tool at the actual contact point we’re working on and, with the Shift key held down, drag slightly upward and release.
  13. Highlight the layer thumbnail (as opposed to the layer mask) of this particular shadow and go Filter>Blur>Lens Blur…
  14. Enter the values as shown here:lensblur Adobe Photoshop Tip   Attack of the iPod People
  15. Repeat for all remaining points of contact.

shadowsdone Adobe Photoshop Tip   Attack of the iPod People

Step 7: iType

Finally we get to the easy step: adding the text. Apple’s font of choice these days is their own special cut of Myriad, but any cut will look just fine here.

Grab the Horizontal Type tool select a nice cut of Myriad Bold in the Options bar and set the text color to white. You will have to choose the size and anti-alias method yourself–that’s up to your discretion.

Go ahead and type something appropriate for the image. It should be short–preferably one word–and it would be even better if it starts with a lower case “i” followed by an upper case letter… like iPod, right? I broke with that tradition and gave Laura’s iPod poster her signature moniker.

Then, if you like, in Myriad Semibold, you can add a centered bit of copy at the bottom sort of like the “10,000 songs in your pocket. Mac or PC.” that Apple has on their posters.

And then, my friends, you are done.

MacHottie Adobe Photoshop Tip   Attack of the iPod People

Conclusion

I hope you are able to have fun with this tutorial and make interesting and creative iPod-like images. I know it isn’t an easy tutorial but the results are very close to the iPod posters you’ve seen around town. If the instructions provided here have not been sufficient or if you have found errors, you are encouraged to let us know but, as previously stated, I cannot offer technical support of a nature specific to your image on such a complex procedure. It is in honor of those whom I’ve driven to frustration that I offer this graphic courtesy of Leo Laporte:

leo spr strangle Adobe Photoshop Tip   Attack of the iPod People

Adobe Photoshop’s Extract filter, like other filters that purport to isolate objects from backgrounds in photos, is very complicated. Many image specific problems may arise and some images simply will not work. For this reason I will not be able to offer any help to people who attempt this tutorial and encounter difficulty. The methods used here work on the image I am using and many others I have tried, but your mileage may vary. Please note, however, that if you encounter an error in the explanation of this filter, you are encouraged to let me know.

This tutorial is intended for advanced audiences. Some steps may be objectionable to some users. Discretion is advised.

Powered by Hackadelic Sliding Notes 1.6.5
An actual silhouette is created by having a subject lit from behind. With the light source being behind the iPod people, their shadows would logically be cast in front of them. But, as evident in other aspects of the iPod commercials the accepted laws of science do not always apply.Powered by Hackadelic Sliding Notes 1.6.5

AJAX Applications, Part 1

Most of the high-profile AJAX web applications are commercial and run on corporate servers like Google Maps or Flickr. We’re going to start with some lesser-know solutions that are Open Source, and can be hosted on your own PHP/MySQL enabled server.

Since we’re diving into a new subject, I’m going to take a couple lines in explanation. AJAX or Asynchronous JavaScript and XML is a programming method that allows interactive interfaces in web applications. What? You can now drag-and drop and change options without reloading a webpage.

This week’s picks are great examples of this technology that enhance your web experience and replace some of your desktop applications.

Gregarius

Forget Bloglines. You can run a feed reader with the convenience of web-based access, but the quick interface of a desktop application for free (of course).

gregarius AJAX Applications, Part 1

Gregarius retrieves your updated feeds, searches them and organizes them with tags. The Open Source PHP application is still in early development, but already supports plugins and theming.

Webnote

This project offers a sticky note solution, complete with live editing and dragability. This system provides a unique note taking system that is accessible from the web, but quick and easy to edit.

RoundCube

This Open Source project offers a webmail interface to your IMAP email account. Unlike other webmail applications you’re used to(unless you are part of the Yahoo! Mail beta), this one allows you to drag messages to folders and toggle read/unread status instantly.

roundcube AJAX Applications, Part 1

I know you’ve got the point already, but the implementation of AJAX in this webmail interface again makes it as quick and user-friendly as your desktop mail client. Because the mail is still stored in your IMAP account, RoundCube won’t clog your database with mail either.

Monket Calendar

This early project gives you an iCal-inspired dragable interface, supports events that span multiple days and reads the iCal .ics format.

Since we’re still in the early days of AJAX evolution, expect these projects to mature – and more to emerge.

Brian

Photoshop Not-so-Quick Tip 9– Photoshop’s Extract filter

The following material has been gleaned from our own tutorial, Adobe Photoshop Tip: Attack of the iPod People, but is presented here so that others might benefit from the technique without having to sort through the tutorial in which it was used.

Photoshop’s Extract filter is what is called a “destructive” filter in that it makes nearly irreversible changes to an image …unless you take precautions. As I recommend with all destructive filters, use the Extract filter on a duplicate of the layer you wish to affect. In fact, we’re going to duplicate the subject layer twice in this demonstration. This is because we will eventually use the results of the Extract filter to create a layer mask and, presuming your subject layer is the “Background” layer and also assuming that you’d like to leave it that way, there is no way to add a layer mask to a “Background” layer…they just work differently than regular layers…they represent a flattened image.

Okay, so, duplicate the layer your subject is on (most likely the “Background”
layer) and name
this new layer “Close crop”. Duplicate the Close Crop layer and
arrange its clone above it in the Layers palette (it’s probably already there).
Name this layer “Sacrificial Layer”. Click the “eye” next to the original or Background layer in the layers palette so only the “Close Crop” and “Sacrificial Layer” are visible (it will likely be hard to tell what is visible since all three layers are identical)

Now, make sure the “Sacrificial
Layer” is selected in the Layers palette. Here comes the tricky part:

Disclaimer:

Adobe Photoshop’s Extract filter, like other filters that purport to
isolate objects from backgrounds in photos, is very complicated. Many
image specific problems may arise and some images simply will not work.
For this reason I will not be able to offer any help to people who attempt
this tutorial and encounter difficulty. The methods used here work on
the image I am using and many others I have tried, but your mileage may
vary.

This tutorial is intended for advanced audiences. Some steps may be objectionable
to some users. Discretion is advised.

Go Filter>Extract…

Now you will be faced with the Extract filter interface. The Extract filter
is a “destructive” filter that, with your help, will extract (thus
the name) your subject from its background. What I mean by “destructive”
is that once you have gone through the trouble of getting this filter to do
all it can to isolate your subject and have clicked “Ok”, the
effect it has on the layer is no longer editable. It does not create a layer
mask or clipping path–it deletes pixels. This is why I had you create the “Sacrificial
Layer” and why we are applying the Extract filter to that layer and not
the “Close Crop” or any other layer.

The other scary thing about the Extract filter is that it is darned near impossible
to teach in a text based tutorial like this. So the best
I can do for the time being is to give you the steps involved and the purposes
of those steps:

  1. highlight 20071015 210021 Photoshop Not so Quick Tip 9   Photoshops Extract filterHighlighting:
    The Edge Highlighter tool (looks like a fat felt tip marker) shows Photoshop
    the “border zone.” You’ll draw along the edge of your subject–like
    an outline. But, unlike an outline you need to draw about equally inside the
    edge and outside. The mark you make with this tool tells Photoshop, “Somewhere
    in the stroke of this line is where the edge is.” So if your subject
    has a hazy edge, you’re going to want to use a bigger brush size. But keep
    in mind: the finer the outline the better.
    Make sure your finished outline is a closed shape or that it starts and ends
    at the image’s edge. Also be sure to outline anywhere the background shows
    through within the outer border–such as if your subject has his hands on
    his hips looking heroic, he’ll have background showing through under his arms
    (unless he’s wearing a cape). I have a few areas like this on top of the dancer’s leg where the chains have lifted into the air a bit.
    You can use the Eraser tool (looks like an eraser …duh) to rub out any mistake
    you might make in highlighting. Holding down the Option key while using the
    Edge Highlighter tool also serves as an eraser.
    If you’re feeling really keen, you can try out “Smart Highlighting”
    which promises to follow the edge as you draw and even choose an appropriate
    brush width. It actually does a pretty good job and I highly recommend giving
    it a test drive. Smart Highlighting can be accessed by clicking the checkbox
    on the right side of the Extract filter interface or by holding down the Command
    key while using the Edge Highlighter tool. It can be a great time saver but
    can’t handle fine detail or low contrast edges very well.
  2. Filling: Once you’ve highlighted the border zone,
    you’re going to have to tell Photoshop which side of the border you want to
    keep. Click the Fill tool (looks like a paint bucket) inside the border where
    you want Photoshop to save your subject from its background.
    If the Fill tool spilled paint where you didn’t want it to, just click again
    in the same spot and it will remove the fill. Then you can grab the Highlight
    tool again and draw in the open spot where the paint flowed out and try again.
  3. preview 20071015 210232 Photoshop Not so Quick Tip 9   Photoshops Extract filter
    Previewing:
    Once you feel you have mastered Highlighting and Filling, look down at the
    bottom of the setting on the right hand side of the window and set the Display
    setting to “Other…” A color picker will pop up. Go ahead and pick a nice bright color. Click the “Preview”
    button in the top right corner of the Extract filter window and let Photoshop
    have a crack at extracting based on your instructions.
    Once Photoshop is done attempting to extract your subject form its background,
    you may be completely disappointed with this filter. Is the subject in your
    original photo on a background that is very busy or similar in color to the
    subject? That will make it tough. If so, go to the Preview settings and set
    Show to “Original” and check both the “Show Highlight”
    and “Show Fill” boxes and you’ll be back to before the preview.
    Now check the “Textured Image” box in the Extraction settings above
    the Preview settings you just adjusted. Try clicking the Preview button again
    and see if the results are any better. If not, we’ll just have to make do
    somehow. There is more tweaking ahead still.
  4. Cleanup and Edge Touchup: The Cleanup tool (looks
    like a paint brush on a square with circle inside it) will allow you to softly
    erase parts of the extracted image or, by holding down the Option key, paint
    them back in. You should go around the perimeter of your subject and make
    sure all his or her bits are still intact.
    If the problems lie more with the smoothness of the edges than the accuracy,
    use the Edge Touchup tool (looks like a fat felt tip marker on a square with
    circle inside it) to smooth out the roughness. You can even hold down the
    Command key while using it to smudge the edge to your liking.
    You are free at this stage to jump between the Cleanup and Edge Touchup tools,
    but any tweaking using the Highlighter tool or Fill tool will nullify anything
    you have worked for since clicking Preview. So, work at refining that edge,
    because once you’re done this, click “OK” and apply your extraction.

Man, that was like pulling teeth!

Once your Extraction has applied, Command-Click the Sacrificial Layer and select
the Close Crop layer in the Layers palette. Go Layer>Add Layer Mask>Reveal
Selection. You may now delete the Sacrificial Layer.

Channels 20071015 210447 Photoshop Not so Quick Tip 9   Photoshops Extract filterNow,
with the layer mask of the Close Crop layer selected in the Layers palette,
edit the mask to further refine the extraction. I like using the Smudge tool
to smoosh the edge of the extraction a tiny bit so that they don’t look pixelated.
This process will allow you to edit out any rough spots or refine any details
that you missed or couldn’t get right in the Extract filter window.

You might even want to open the Channels palette, click the eye next to the Close Crop Mask to the “on” position and turn off the eye next to RGB
(or CMYK). This will allow you to look at just the mask and make sure it doesn’t
have any black or white greeblies in places where they don’t belong. The Extract
filter often leaves these things strewn about the highlight area and, though
they may be difficult to see now, they may come back to haunt you later. Once
you’re done, click the image thumbnail of the Close Crop layer.

That’s about it for the Extact Filter. I hope I’ve cleared up a bit of its mystery.