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How Do I Crop A Bit Of One Picture And Put It On Another Picture On Photoshop

How do you cut a circle out of a picture in Photoshop CS4?

There are at least two options (depending on what You want the result to be). First option is simply delete/cut the selection. You can do this by choosing the Elliptical Marquee Tool (can be found from the tool menu right next to the Move tool and if it's not visible, hold the left mouse button down on the Marquee Tool and all the options show up) and on the active layer that You want to cut the circle just click and drag a selection area with the Elliptical Marquee Tool (hold Your Shift-key down when dragging to make a perfect circle). You can also move the selection while making it, holding down the Spacebar-key. Release the mouse button (before the Shift-key) and the selection is made. Then You can hit Delete of Backspace-key or choose from Edit-menu Clear or Cut.Second option is to make a mask (recommendable). It's maybe a little bit more complicated but the advange is that You can edit the cutted circle later and none of the cutted pictures data will be lost. You can follow the instructions from the first option to the point where You have made the selection area. While You are at the active layer, hold down Your Alt-key and click Add layer mask from Layers -palette. This should give You a nice cut out circle to the image and You should see a linked mask layer next to Your graphics layer. If You want to edit the mask, You activate it by clicking it from the Layers -palette. The basic idea with the mask is that black color hides and white reveals graphics from layer associated with it. There is also a little chain symbol between the normal layer and the mask layer. If You click that off (comes there as default) You can move the layers separately without moving the other layer.

How do you crop a picture into another picture?

You don't because it's not called cropping.Cropping is simply when you cut an image up, like chopping bits of the top, sides, or bottom, to make an image smaller.  What you are talking about is extracting an image/object/subject from a background, and copying and pasting it onto another image.You need image editing software to do it, certainly it's possible in Adobe Photoshop or similar image editors such as the free software GIMPYou could also use simpler software, such as MS Paint, or Paint.NETThe basics of doing such an edit are that you make a selection around an object to be copied, copy it, then open another image, then paste it.  With other more advanced image editors such as Photoshop/GIMP you can also use other techniques such as layers and layer masks.  Layer masking is a non-destructive method of masking out parts of an image to leave the subject only. The use of layers allows you to create a stack of images to create a composite, for example, a background image on one layer, and on top of that another layer with an image with has been masked out to reveal only the subject.

How to print a wallet size pictures in adobe photoshop?? and what kind of paper should i used to print a pic.?

Wallet size is 2 x 3 inches.

Open your photo your in Photoshop.

Image > Image Size

Set the image size to just large enough to crop a full 2x3 selection from it.

Select the rectangular marquee tool, set the size to 'Fixed Size' and set the dimensions to '2x3'.

Next, click on your photo to set the marquee on the image and move it around to select the 'crop' that you want.

Press 'Ctrl + c' to copy the marquee selection to the clipboard.

Press 'Ctrl + n' to enter a name for the new image.

Press 'Ctrl + v' to paste it into the new image background.

You can save the image as a jpeg, png, or file type of your choice at this point if you wish.

Press Ctrl + a to select 'all' of your wallet sized image.

Press Ctrl + c to copy it to the clipboard

Select File > New and set the size to 8.25 x 10.25 (avoids the 'cropping' warning in PS if you set it to 8.5 x 11) It will still print fine.

Press 'Ctrl + v' to paste in one wallet sized print.

Layer > Duplicate Layer. This adds a second wallet to the image background

Use the Move tool to position the second wallet appropriately. Leave just a bit of the white background showing between the two. This will help when cutting the wallets out later.

Repeat adding a layer and moving the image 7 more times. This will give you 9 wallets in a grid. Leave just a bit of the white background between all rows and columns of wallets.

When you are satisfied with the layout of all nine photos, press Layer > Flatten Image.

Add your choice of Ink Jet Photo paper to your printer and print the page. Personally, I prefer HP Photo paper or Kodak Photo Paper. Some of the cheaper brands just don't measure up.

Do a 'File Save As' if you want to be able to reprint the wallets again at a later date.

In Photoshop, how can I copy the lawn from one photo to another photo and make it fit?

Here's a little help for you.

You can always copy and paste parts of the lawn onto new layers, merge them, then use the eraser tool to tidy up afterwards.

Another way is to create a brush from a bit of the lawn. http://help.adobe.com/en_US/Photoshop/11... and some of the tutorials at http://sixrevisions.com/photoshop/24-use...

See create brush from image or something similar in your books.

How do I crop multiple pictures at once?

If the images are at different sizes (with just a fixed height for the bottom banner), then an automated cropping action in Photoshop can help.Open the Action panel, create a new action (name it e.g. “crop bottom 20px”) and hit the Record button.Now, open a sample file (a copy of an intended pic), select the menu command Image – Canvas Size, set it to Relative, and state the number of vertical pixels as a negative number (let’s say -20), and don’t forget to hit the “Align at top” proxy.Hit the OK button, dismiss the warning, and Save and Close the file.Stop the recording.Now go to the File – Automate – Batch command, select the Action you just created and named, choose the folder with all pics, and set the Target to simply Save & Close. Don't forget to check the two options to ignore the file settings of the Open and Save commands you recorded, otherwise the Batch will perform the action a 100 times with the same file, over and over…You can also skip the Opening, Saving, and Closing in the recording, but depending on the file type this might become a bit of a disturbance.Check the Adobe Help pages in case you need more instructions and guidance:Create Actions in Adobe PhotoshopRunning a Batch Action on a Folder

How do I crop an image in Photoshop to a smaller size without losing its quality?

Try this steps for crop an image in Photoshop to a smaller size without losing its quality.Before resizing , convert it into smart object.Right click on the layer of the image ---> Convert it into Smart Objectthen resize the smart object using Free Transform tool.I found it helpful. But there would be a bit of a compromise in image quality.Note: Do your edit work on the image before you go to smart object. Else you have to raster it again will sure be a loss in quality.

What is the best way to crop yourself into a picture?

Trey provided a good description. One thing I would like to stress is that your combined picture will look much better if you are careful about the lighting and backgrounds of the pictures you shoot. Avoid flash. It will cast a shadow behind each person and you will have to draw in the shadows. This is possible, but it is extra work.Here is an example that could have gone better. A colleague was retiring and wanted pictures of the group. A group picture was shot with all but one of the engineers in the group. I told him that when Charlie gets here you can take a picture of him seated at the end of the table and I will combine the photos later. Here are the individual photos:At first glance, these photos look like they are taken from about the same spot with similar lighting. If you look at the right end of the table, you can see that the photographer was standing a a different position. This would have been no problem if the original picture left plenty of room to add a person. It didn’t so I had to use some of the background from the second picture. Since the two photos where shot from different angles, the backgrounds didn’t match.Here’s the composite:Can you spot all of the places where the background was recreated? I needed Charlie’s reflection in the table so I distorted the second photo to get the left end of the table to match. The background behind Charlie didn’t match so I cloned various parts of it from one photo of the other to get it to look reasonable. I you look carefully, you can find lots of discrepancies, but as long as people are looking at the people, they will never see the background.Next time I offer to create a composite picture, I will take the pictures too .

What program can I use to put my face on another picture?

Download the free (!!) Program Gimp. It will do around 90% of everything you can do on the vastly over priced Photoshop.Spend twelve months learning how to use it. Perfect your skills.And then superimpose your face over another picture. Easy.See below…..That's me as Charles II….

How to edit a picture having a 2x2" size using the microsoft word?

You can crop (crop: To trim vertical or horizontal edges of an object. Pictures are often cropped to focus attention on a particular area.) any picture except an animated GIF (animated GIF: A file that contains a series of Graphics Interchange Format (GIF) images that are displayed in rapid sequence by some Web browsers to produce an animated effect.) picture by using the Crop command. To crop an animated GIF, trim the picture in an animated GIF editing program, and then insert the picture again.

Select the picture you want to crop.
On the Picture toolbar (toolbar: A bar with buttons and options that you use to carry out commands. To display a toolbar, click Customize on the Tools menu, and then click the Toolbars tab.), click Crop .
Note If the Picture toolbar is not visible, click Toolbars on the View menu, and then click Picture.

Position the cropping tool over a cropping handle and then do one of the following:
To crop one side, drag the center handle on that side inward.
To crop equally on two sides at once, hold down CTRL as you drag the center handle on either side inward.
To crop equally on all four sides at once, hold down CTRL as you drag a corner handle inward.
On the Picture toolbar, click Crop to turn off the Crop command.
Note You can undo a crop at anytime before saving the picture.

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