Term
| Name two of the three places you can access Quick Brushes. |
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Definition
| You can access Quick Brushes in the Adjustments Inspector's Adjustments pop-up menu, from the Quick Brush pop-up menu in the tool strip and from the toolbar in Full Screen View. |
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Term
| What is the major difference between the Repair brush and the Clone Brush? |
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Definition
| The Repair Brush copies pixels from one area (the source) and paints it over the destination area. The Repair Brush then attempts to blend the tones and colors of the copied area to match the destination area, while preserving the original source texture. The Clone Brush is a straight copy/paste from one area to another without blending. |
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Term
| What two brushes does Aperture offer for cleaning up brush strokes? |
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Definition
| Aperture has two tools for cleaning up brush strokes: the Eraser tool is used to remove stray or errant strokes; the Feather tool is used to create gentler blends along the edges of a stroke. |
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Term
| If you wanted to darken your image but retain the highlights, is Polarize or Burn the better Quick Brush to use? |
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Definition
| Polarize would be the better Quick Brush to use. The Polarize brush darkens the shadows and midtones, making the color in those areas much richer. It leaves highlights unaltered. Burn darkens the highlights, midtones and shadows of an image. |
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Term
| True or False: Only brushes created from the Adjustments inspector are nondestructive. Quick Brushes create new 16-bit TIFF or PSD master files. |
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Definition
| False! All adjustments and brushes in Aperture are nondestructive. Master Files are created only when you use an external editor. |
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