PS Tool Difference

I am having difficulty in determining what the difference is between the
healing brush and the clone stamp tool even after reading the
explanations from a number of sources.
Additionally, does anyone know how and when to choose which of these
tools to use when editing photographs. One of the things I need to do
is remove shadows around people due to lack of bounce flash.

Measekite


Re: PS Tool Difference

In article <cflgg.15761$VE1.2617@newssvr14.news.prodigy.com>, inkystinky@oem.
com says...
You might want to check out this URL for the shadow removal. I *just* got it
from the other PS group, and the method looks promising. The OP there found it
and stated that it worked well for just what you are doing:
http://www.inertia-llc.com/sandbox/tutorials/shadow-matchcolor/index.html
In rough terms, the Healing Brush/Patch Tool replaces "texture" from
elsewhere, while the Clone Stamp replaces "pixels." I know that they sound
really similar, but are not.
Hunt


Noone@hunt.com (Hunt)


Re: PS Tool Difference

On Sat, 03 Jun 2006 19:17:28 GMT, measekite <inkystinky@oem.com>
wrote:
While waiting for someone with more experience to reply, I tend to
think it (usually) comes to personal taste. When covering larger
areas, like in working with the 'Vanishing Piont' filter, the clone
stamp is a definite advantage. And when working with the
healing tool right next to (or even only close to a border,
it (sometimes) clones the color from the other side of
the border, which again often makes the clone
stamp tool the preferable alternative.
Dave


Dave


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