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Posts Tagged ‘aware’

Video: How Photoshop’s ‘Color Adaptation’ setting can improve Content Aware Fill accuracy

09 Dec

Photoshop’s Content Aware Fill tool seems fairly straightforward, but a recent tutorial shared by Adobe shows a clever little trick that could result in more accurate edits.

Shared on its Photoshop YouTube channel, the one-minute tutorial shows how changing the default ‘Color Adaptation’ setting within the Content Aware Fill workspace can result much more accurate fills working with images with gradients in them.

As Adobe’s Meredith Stotznere explains, this setting controls the brightness and contrast of the filled area to better match the surroundings when the default setting is too rough an edit. By default, the setting is on, but not at its highest strength. To improve the feature, Photoshop offers a ‘High’ and ‘Very High’ setting for smoother transitions, as well as an ‘None’ setting for when you’re working with hard edges with overlapping colors.

It’s a small change, but could result in much more pleasing edits when you need to remove objects from an image. You can find more 60-second tutorials on the Photoshop Magic Minute playlist.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Adobe’s Project ‘Deep Fill’ is an incredible, AI-powered Content Aware Fill

21 Oct

The coolest technology to come out of Adobe MAX is, sadly, not the technology we already have access to. Like Adobe’s Project Cloak we showed you earlier today, it’s the incredible ‘Sneaks’ sneak peeks that really wow the audience. Case in point: check out Project Deep Fill, a much more powerful, AI-driven version of Content Aware Fill that makes the current tool look like crap… to put it lightly.

Deep Fill is powered by the Adobe Sensei technology—which “uses artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning and deep learning”—and trained using millions of real-world images. So while Content Aware Fill has to work with the pixels at hand to ‘guess’ what’s behind the object or person you’re trying to remove, Deep Fill can use its training images to much more accurately create filler de novo.

The examples used in the demo video above are impressive to say the least:

And just when you thought the demo is over, you find out that Deep Fill can also take into account user inputs—like sketching—to completely alter an image:

In this way it’s a lot more than a ‘fill’ feature. In fact, Adobe calls it “a new deep neural network-based image in-painting system.” Check out the full demo for yourself above, and then read all about the other ‘Sneaks’ presented at Adobe MAX here.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Demo: Adobe’s experimental ‘Cloak’ tech is like Content Aware Fill for video

21 Oct

Yesterday at Adobe MAX, the lucky attendees got to see a few of Adobe’s signature “Sneaks”: sneak peeks at crazy features that are in development. And chief among them this year was something code-named Adobe Cloak.

In essence, Adobe Cloak is the video-editing counterpart to Photoshop’s Content Aware Fill. Simply outline the portion of your video that you would like removed—be it a stationary object or a couple walking through your scene—and Adobe Cloak will intelligently erase them from the shot. This is, of course, something VFX artists have been doing for ages, but automating the process to this degree is impressive to say the least.

Adobe sent us a few demo videos of the feature in action, which you can check out above. And if you want more details about how Adobe Cloak works/was developed, Engadget got to sit down with Adobe research engineer Geoffrey Oxholm and VFX product manager Victoria Nece to talk about the technology, which is still “in the experimental stages.”

The bad news is, there’s no current plans to implement it. The good news? They wouldn’t be working on it if they didn’t plan to implement it some time, right!?

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Content Aware Fill vs Content Aware Scale

08 Jan

Content Aware Fill and Content Aware Scale sound very similar, but do two different jobs. However when it comes to resizing a photo both work amazingly once you know which to use.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

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Video Rating: 4 / 5

 

Adobe Photoshop CS5 – Content Aware Fill

31 Jul

In this tutorial, AJ demonstrates the most talked about feature in Photoshop CS5–Content Aware Fill. Yup, that one.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

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Replacing backgrounds with content aware fill in Photoshop and Bridge CS5 for Photographers

09 Feb

“Watch the entire course at www.lynda.com In Photoshop and Bridge CS5 for Photographers New Features, author Chris Orwig explores the enhancements in Photoshop CS5 and Bridge CS5 from a photographer’s perspective. This course introduces the Mini Bridge, a brand new panel to browse and open images without leaving Photoshop, expanded layer functionality, improved sharpening and noise reduction in Adobe Camera Raw, cleaning up and enhancing photographs with the new Bristle Brush and content-aware tools, and working with the new High Dynamic Range (HDR) toning controls.”
Video Rating: 5 / 5

www.cbrush.com Photoshop CS3 for Photographers An Advanced, Precision Workflow 01) intro 02) camera raw pt. 1 03) camera raw pt. 2 04) workspace setup 05) liquify filter 06) cloning and healing 07) shadows and highlights 08) contrast with unsharp mask 09) dodging and burning 10) levels 11) curves 12) hue and saturation 13) local adjustment layers 14) adding a vignette 15) reduce noise and sharpen 16) enhancing with noise 17) final steps
Video Rating: 5 / 5