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If you are new to Photoshop, you hate the pen tool. If you have been using
Photoshop for awhile, you love it. Why is this? Well, let me show you a few tips
that might help you fall in love with your pen tool.
The pen tool or Bezier as it is called in some circles is a great feature. It
allows you to be really bad at drawing by hand because you can get curves and
lines close to perfect, and then adjust them afterwards if you need to. Let's
start with the basics.
Select your pen tool and get a clean canvas. This is how the pen tool works.
1. When you click once, you start a new anchor point, or a point of junction.
2. If you draw the line out (you don't have to hold the button), it creates a
straight line.
3. If you click again somewhere and let go immediately, it creates a sharp
angle.
4. If you click again somewhere, hold the button down and "pull" the mouse, you
create a rounded curve.
5. When you have created all the anchor points you desire, you can select the
direct selection tool. It's a white arrow in the tool bar above the pen, and
make adjustments to the path you have created.
For the most part, that's it. There are a few other details to the pen tool, but
the basics are exactly that.
Somebody told me an analogy awhile back and it really made a difference for me.
Imagine your pen tool is a car. The edge of the object you are drawing is a road
that you are driving down. Now every time you come to a curve, you have to hold
the button down and steer towards that curve. That will create a pretty close
approximation for what you want to do. Remember that if the turn is abrupt, you
just click and let go so that it is a sharp angle.
The other thing that should help you is practice. Nobody masters that pen tool
on the first try. You have to experiment and make mistakes to get it right. It's
sort of like riding a bike. It takes awhile, but once you get it, you never
forget.
Below I have created a oval shape and then traced around it with the pen tool.

Notice the points at which I made anchors. Keep that driving analogy in mind
when you do so. Now these points and curves are not perfectly precise, but
that's OK, because I can go back and make some minor adjustments if I need to.

Here I have made a star with sharp edges and did the same thing, only I clicked
and let go at the anchor points to make sharp angles.

To give you something to play around with, I have created a few objects for
you to trace. Just save this image, bring it into Photoshop and then have at it.
If you can trace these perfectly, you are off to a great start.

Tutorial Source
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