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Using clone stamp on Photoshop (with Video)

Jan11
2010
8 Comments Written by San
Total Views :28067

Clone stamp is not just for cloning objects in photos, you can also “erase” them. Blemishes and wrinkles can be magically erased from your model’s faces as well as that annoying person who somehow made it in to your photo.

To start, select the clone stamp on your tool bar or press S on keyboard.

You will first need to pick a spot where you want Photoshop to copy/sample the information from than start painting over the area where you want the cloning to happen.

First hold Alt/Option to set a sampling point, this is the location you want to clone, than start painting as you would with a regular brush. Instead of solid paint coming out of the brush it is a identical spot where you first set your sampling point.

This is similar to using a lasso or any other selecting method and copy and pasting it to a different location.

The first 5 settings are the same as Brush tool, please read my post on brush settings

Brush – you can use any brush and brush dynamic for the Clone Stamp. Read my article on how to use Brush here.

Mode – the colors can be manipulated using any of the blending mode, although I do not advise using this. You will gain better control if you paint onto a blank layer than using the blending mode on the layer instead.

Opacity – Lets you choose the transparency of your stamp.

Flow – The value is how fast the paint will be applied, for best result use soft edged brush. You will see the paint builds up as the brush overlap previous paint.

Airbrush – this option will only work with brush with soft edge, it will gradually accumulate into a bigger blob if you hold your mouse in one area for too long similar to an airbrush.

Aligned – Once you start painting after you’ve set your reference point, the cloning will continue where you last left off every time you release your mouse until you set another anchor point. If aligned is off than once you release your mouse and tries to paint again, it will use the original reference point.

Example –

- Current layer, Clone tool will only be cloning whatever that is on the active layer.

- Current & Below, Clone tool will only clone whatever that is on the active layer plus whatever is visible under the active layer.

- All Layer, Clone tool will take all visible layer into account.

-

Include Adjustment Layer, this icon become available when you have an active adjustment layer turned on and Sample is set to anything other than Current Layer. When it is on, it will ignore all adjustment layer, and when it is off than what you see is what you will get.

Use the key “[“ and “]” on your keyboard to increase or decrease the size of your brush.

Best way to use clone tool is to paint it on a blank layer with the Sample set to Current & Below or All layer, that way you are not destroying the original.

There are many ways to “erase” an object in a photo rather than Clone stamp, what else can you use to achieve the same result?

This is part of my tutorial set. Please visit the TUTORIAL PAGE for a list of all the tutorials.

Posted in Tool Bar - Tagged blemish, clone, duplicate, erase, face, how, photoshop, removal, stamp, to, wire
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5 Comments

  1. merger69's Gravatar merger69
    January 12, 2010 at 2:52 pm | Permalink

    using the lasso with feather was actually a good tips, thanks!

    [Reply]

  2. padparty's Gravatar padparty
    January 12, 2010 at 3:00 pm | Permalink

    thanks for the video, that was pretty fast!

    [Reply]

  3. Toan's Gravatar Toan
    January 15, 2010 at 2:35 pm | Permalink

    Hey, thank for the tutorial :P

    [Reply]

  4. San's Gravatar San
    January 15, 2010 at 2:59 pm | Permalink

    Hey Toan, thanks for stopping by, wait isn’t that you I just erased in my picture above!!?? lol

    [Reply]

    San Reply:
    January 25th, 2010 at 2:08 pm

    test

    [Reply]

  5. Ryan's Gravatar Ryan
    January 16, 2010 at 11:40 am | Permalink

    Pretty cool (and useful)! I used to be crap at photoshop. Did this (http://bit.ly/psoffer) now I’m a pro… make a living anyway! Thanks for the tut anyway!

    [Reply]

    sugarbuns81 Reply:
    January 21st, 2010 at 6:57 pm

    your message sounds like a spam

    [Reply]

  1. How to remove people or object from a photo in photoshop | San's Graphic Blog on February 28, 2010 at 3:45 pm

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