My-Photoshop.com

Dedicated to Adobe Photoshop & Creative Suite

Posted by lolaness ADD COMMENTS

Cut Out Photo Tutorial

A recent request asked us for some tutorials on placing photos inside a heart, champagne glass, or other wedding-themed shape. Here’s our answer in 5 quick steps – and it’s not limited to a single shape. You can use this method on any photo with any shape your heart desires.

Final Image Preview

final-full

Open Image

Open any image that you want to use in Photoshop. Make sure that it is in RGB mode by clicking “Image”, choosing “Mode”, and ticking “RGB”. Crop the photo if necessary.

The photo we’ll be using as an example is by emsago at sxc.hu

original

Make a Shape

This method will work with absolutely any custom shape you feel like using on your photographs. We’re just using a heart that’s part of Photoshop’s default selection.

Make sure that the shape you draw is a shape – NOT a selection. Center it over the area of the photo you want “cut out”. Do NOT rasterize the shape at this point

Drag the Vector Mask

Your shape layer, since it’s not rasterized, has two boxes showing on it. One of the boxes is mostly gray, with the shape you’ve drawn in white. This gray box is called a vector mask.

We want to use the vector mask on our photo; masks are non-destructive forms of editing. They don’t destroy the original photo, they just hide parts of it.

To move the vector mask, you’ll need to click on the gray box to select it. Then, drag the gray box (not the whole layer) on to your photo’s layer. This applies the vector mask to your photo. Reference the illustration below to see how the layers should look before and after.

vectormask

Delete

Click once on the “Shape 1″ layer (which is now nothing more than a layer filled with white, which we don’t need) to select it. Then, right-click the layer and choose “Delete Layer”. This gets the extra layer out of the way now that we’re done with it.

Rasterize Vector Mask

The second you deleted the “Shape 1″ layer, you should have seen your photo finished … or nearly so. We need to make the lines of our shape – the vector mask – smooth by rasterizing it.

First, click the vector mask to select it just as you did in step 3. Right-click the mask and choose “Rasterize Vector Mask”. Beautiful!

final-full

All text, images, and this tutorial are copyright their respective owners. You do not have permission to copy whole tutorials, either in English or translated to another language.

Leave a Reply

Featured Video

About Us

My-Photoshop is dedicated to the Adobe line of products - largely to its most popular product, Adobe Photoshop. Within this site you will find more than 8 years worth of tutorials, free downloads, and original products that will make your Photoshop experience more seamless, faster, and fun!

Recent Comments