| Photoshop Vector Shapes |
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Last week, Alexandro Colorado emailed me asking why Photoshop creates a mask
when making shapes with the shape tool. I told him that I would explain the
reason why the best I could.
Now take a look at the layers palette. On the layer with the rabbit you see two
things - a color portion and a vector mask portion. The color portion can be
changed in real time just like a vector program does. When you double click on
the layer color swatch, a color picker appears. When you select a color the
entire shape is instantly converted to that color. This is much nicer that
selecting and filling a shape as you would traditionally with a raster shape,
since it leaves no halo or jaggy leftovers after a few fill changes.
Now that we are zoomed in, you can see that Photoshop is smoothing the image
boundaries just as would happen with any other rasterized image. A true vector
program would allow you to zoom in as close as you could and you would still see
a perfectly smooth line. So this really isn't a vector shape at all- it only
appears to be in the way that Photoshop let's you manipulate it.
So in the above image I have simply messed around with the paths on the shape. Photoshop updates the shape according to my changes in real time. I am really altering the mask, but it appears as though I am altering the shape itself. You can see the path around the image easily here.
In the above image I have selected a new color which Photoshop again updates
in real time. This is a nice feature that keeps one from having to do a
select-fill. It also preserves the edges of the image much better than it would
otherwise. |