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Finally, cloning usually involves a lot of zooming, so familiarize yourself
with the shortcuts for zooming:
F4
| Full image
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F2
| Zoom in gradually
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F3
| Zoom out gradually
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Z
| Marquee-zoom
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Repairing
Jamie
Parts of this repair job will be easy, but other parts will be challenging.
In almost all cases, the prevailing factor is the background: what is
supposed to be behind the scratch?
Figure 25.4 is a close-up of the scratch, and we have divided it into
four sections:
- The tip of the scratch at the top-left will
be easy, because the background is diffuse, undefined, and insignificant.
- The part that goes through Jamies hair
will be much more difficult, because her hair is full of highlights
and contours.
- Across her neck wont be as challenging
as the hair, but imperfections will be more noticeable.
- Removing the scratch across her shirt shouldnt
be difficult, but well need to be careful with the neckline and
the subtle vertical stripes.
FIGURE
25.4 This scratch would doom a photo to the
trash can, were it not for programs like PHOTO-PAINT.
Start at the top-left, where you can get your feet wet with the easy
part:
- 1. Zoom way in on the scratch.
- 2. Invoke the Clone tool by pressing C and move
out to a point away from the scratch.
- 3. Set Transparency to 0, Soft Edge to about 25,
and set the nib size to any size that feels comfortable to you.
- 4. Right-click the mouse to set the cloning position.

- 5. Now drag across the scratch. As you do, note
the grafting action, and keep an eye on the +, to make sure that
it remains in the background area. If it begins to intrude on Jamies
hair, or the scratch itself, reset it.
- 6. As you successfully clone a region, remember
to release the mouse frequently, even if only to continue immediately
where you left off. That makes undoing friendlier.
- 7. Work carefully as you approach Jamies hair.

Repairing the hair requires that you define and then carefully follow
the contours and the patterns of Jamies locks. As you can see in
the preceding images, there are rivers of color running down her hair,
and that describes the course you will need to take as you paint cloned
pixels across the scratch. Here goes:
- 1. Draw an imaginary line down one of the rivers,
and place the + at the bottom of your imaginary line.
- 2. Set the nib size just a bit smaller than the
width of the river, and increase the Soft Edge to about 50. Youre
not going to be able to replicate her hair perfectlythe Soft Edge
is like a fudge factor.
- 3. Start cloning, moving your cursor down
the river. Its important to keep the + in the river as you
clone, otherwise, youll start picking up pixels of a different
color. As necessary, reposition the + as you proceed. When finished
with the first river, your screen should look something like this.

If some patches are too dark, you could increase the transparency and
clone the area from lighter-colored pixels. If you find that you are creating
small lines of color within the river, increase the size of the nib.
Continue through Jamies hairdefining, plotting, and traversing
through the rivers of color. Zoom and pan as necessary; position the +
as necessary; undo as necessary; touch up as necessary. Figure 25.5 shows
what our screen looked like after a first pass through her hairit
should be obvious to you where we had success and where we failed.
FIGURE
25.5 Some of Jamies hair was easy to clone,
while other parts were trickier and left some rough edges.
The left portion was much more defined, and we had a relatively easy
time following rivers of color. But the part closer to her face has more
curls, more abrupt color changes, and we couldnt find many rivers
to help us clone. Now the photo doesnt look scratched; it looks
folded and mutilated. (Make a note, to create a fold in a photo, use the
Clone tool, and try to do a poor job...)
You could probably fix this with the Clone tool, by zooming in ever more
closely, and cloning very small portions, and then painstakingly moving
over by a tiny amount, continuing to clone tiny sections. But really,
its better to turn to another tool for the finishing touches. While
clone can pick up pixels from another area, and while the Soft Edge setting
can help smooth over edges with intricate and overlapping areas of color,
it is ultimately a flawed proposition to weave old and new pixels together
perfectly.
So its best not to try. Its better to gloss over the entire
area, and that is the job of the Blend tool. Blend mixes different colors
to make the transitions between them less pronounced. Furthermore, that
is the problem that we have with Jamies hairdifficult transitions.
Two other of PAINTs tools sound as if they would be relevant here,
as both Smear and Smudge address how colors interact. But we find that
Smear really smears colors, and Smudge is often too subtle. Both
are worth trying, but we predict that youll choose Blend. Heres
how you would use any of them:
- 1. From the Brush Tools flyout (the same one that
houses Clone), choose the Effect tool.
- 2. From the Effects drop-down list on the property
bar (far-left), choose the desired effect:
- Smear, the top-left effect
- Smudge, one to its right
- Blend, lower-left
- 3. From the property bar, set the Amount to about
50 and the Soft Edge to about 75.
- 4. Then just work the area. Drag over it until you
cant see the harsh edgesthe places where it is obvious that
you are looking at pixels, not hair. As before, do it in small steps,
so you can use Undo.

Better?
We spent about 15 minutes on the rest of the recovery process. We had
to redirect one of the curls below Jamies neck, but were confident
that shell forgive us. And in the white shirt, it was virtually
impossible to recreate the very subtle vertical strokes in the pattern,
so we just smudged over it to suggest that the shirt is a bit wrinkled
in that spot.
Figure 25.6 shows the finished image, sans scratch. How you judge the
success of this process depends entirely upon your point of view. If you
compare the photo to the original, expecting that they will look identical,
except for the scratch, you will be less than satisfied. And if you study
the area of the scratch, you will probably be able to see evidence of
the cloning and blending.
FIGURE
25.6 No more scratches on Jamie
But if you didnt know that the photo was scratched...if you had
nothing to compare it to...if you were just looking at this photo on its
own merits...you probably would never know that it was retouched.
Our lead author decided to embellish the photo by achieving that which
he has otherwise been incapable: cleaning Jamies face. So much for
realism...
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