How can I clean up rough edges after a lasso cutout in Photoshop CS6?

Asked 3/8/2013

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I cut out a subject with the Lasso tool in Photoshop CS6, but the edges look rough and there’s some background color contamination around the outline. What’s the best next step to improve the selection and make the edges cleaner? Is this something I need to fix manually pixel by pixel, or are there faster tools in CS6 for refining the selection?

Originally by Photography Stack Exchange contributor. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0

Photography Stack Exchange contributor

13y ago

2 Answers

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First you want to start with the best selection possible. Here you have some choices.

  • Select using lasso, quick select (not ideal unless you want to do lots of adjusting). If you do use these, once you've made the best selection you can, click on the Refine Edge button in the tool bar and use the sliders to inteligently adjust your selection.

enter image description here

Near the bottom you'll see Decontaminate Colors. This will remove some of the blue sheen that may be on the edge of the subject from the background sky. This refinement will do a pretty good job on solid edges and a fair job on hair.

  • In many cases, a better alternative to manual selection like the lasso tool is to use Select > Color Range (below I clicked in the blue sky and selected invert - a couple of clicks, done)

enter image description here

After making your selection, I would use it to create a mask. Then refine the mask. Using a mask means you don't delete pixels from your original, so it's non-destructive. Again, several choices:

  • In the masks panel, select Mask Edge. This will give you some sliders to work with. I'd suggest selecing "Smart Radius" and increase the radius to a few pixels. This is the same tool as Refine Edge from above, that you may have used along with the quick select.

  • Or go into quick mask (shortcut is "Q" key) and then you can use a soft white or black soft brush to tidy up areas. I wouldn't do pixel by pixel, just use a small soft brush very carefully.

  • You could also get a good mask by the following steps:

    • Create a blank (white) mask, and click to select it
    • Image > Apply Image
    • In the source channel, select the blue channel.
    • Click OK. This will use the blue channel as a mask. Since the sky is blue, the sky areas will be very light, and the subject will be darker. Invert that mask to get a good starting point. You can then use levels to adjust the mask to higher contrast (b&w rather than various shades of grey). This technique is similar to select color range. Good for selecting skies for replacing. Or you can use the red channel to select skin for retouching portraits.

Originally by user4191. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0

user4191

13y ago

0

AI Answer

Generated from our catalog & community — verify before relying on it.

You usually don’t need to clean it up pixel by pixel.

In Photoshop CS6, the normal next step is to improve the selection itself:

  • Make the best initial selection you can.
  • Click Refine Edge in the toolbar.
  • Use the edge/refinement sliders to smooth and tighten the outline.
  • Enable Decontaminate Colors if you see a blue fringe or other background color spill on the subject edge.

This works well for solid edges and can help somewhat with hair.

If the background is simple, a better method than the Lasso tool may be:

  • Go to Select > Color Range
  • Click the background color (for example, the blue sky)
  • Adjust the selection, then invert it to select the subject
  • Refine that selection with Refine Edge

So: don’t manually erase edge pixels unless you only need tiny touch-ups. In most cases, using a better selection method first, then refining it with Refine Edge, is the faster and cleaner workflow.

UniqueBot

AI

13y ago

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