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Digital Lifestyle
Images, Graphic Design, and Digital Photography
Masking Tips
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<blockquote data-quote="louishen" data-source="post: 601991" data-attributes="member: 40142"><p>The easiest way is to look at each colour channel in either CMYK or RGB</p><p></p><p>If you have a colour channel with the best contrast between hair and background you can copy that channel and then go about playing with levels and curves to get a good white - black mask between the two, with hair don't make it black and white, keep some feathering at the edges)</p><p></p><p>Hope that helps - worked for me years ago when I had to do a cut out of Scary Spice's hair (the Spice Girls) for a commercial job</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="louishen, post: 601991, member: 40142"] The easiest way is to look at each colour channel in either CMYK or RGB If you have a colour channel with the best contrast between hair and background you can copy that channel and then go about playing with levels and curves to get a good white - black mask between the two, with hair don't make it black and white, keep some feathering at the edges) Hope that helps - worked for me years ago when I had to do a cut out of Scary Spice's hair (the Spice Girls) for a commercial job [/QUOTE]
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