Paint Shop Pro 8 Power!

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The Warp Brush and Mesh Warp Tool

Paint Shop Pro 8 has two new tools that enable you to warp an image: the Warp Brush and the Mesh Warp tool. These tools aren't painting tools per se, but they affect existing painted areas. Each of these tools allows you to move pixels around in a controlled way.

The Warp Brush

Let's look first at the Warp Brush, whose Tool Options palette is shown in Figure 2.31.

Figure 2.31. The Tool Options palette for the Warp Brush.

In addition to some of the controls also available with the Paint Brush, the Warp Brush has several Warp Modes :

The various other settings for Warp Brush affect how each Warp Mode modifies your image. The size of your brush and the setting for Strength are perhaps the most important. In general, a large brush produces a more subtle effect than a small one. And a time-dependent brush like Push or Unwarp has a stronger effect more quickly when Strength has a high value.

The Noise setting that is active when Warp Mode is set to Noise affects how sharp or jagged the introduced randomness effect appears. Higher values produce a more jagged effect, while lower values produce a smoother effect.

You might think that the Warp Brush is just a toy, good for torturing photos of your friends or pets. You certainly can use the Warp Brush in this way, and it definitely is fun to do so. For example, starting with the photo in Figure 2.32, you can produce wickedly warped versions like the one in Figure 2.33.

Figure 2.32. A normal photographic portrait.

Figure 2.33. A completely warped variation.

However, the Warp Brush has more practical and benign uses as well. Using much more subtle modifications, you can change a person's age or expression, for example. Compare the original portrait in Figure 2.32 with the version in Figure 2.34, where the friendly young man is warped into an angry young man.

Figure 2.34. A friendly fellow warped into an angry guy.

To get these more subtle effects, try using a rather large brush (so that the warping effects are not abrupt) with Strength set relatively low. And remember to take advantage of Iron Out and Unwarp to selectively undo some of the effects you get with the other Warp Modes .

You'll explore the Warp Brush more in some of the examples later in this book.

The Mesh Warp Tool

With Mesh Warp, a mesh is superimposed on your image. When you move the nodes of this mesh, the image is warped.

Do some warping, change the warp grid, and do some more warping, if you wish. When you have an effect you like, click the Apply button in the Tool Options palette. If you make a mistake, click the Undo button on the menu bar. And if you think it would be better to go back to the drawing board, click the Cancel button on the Tool Options palette and start again. As you get more and more comfortable with the Mesh Warp tool, you'll find that you can achieve quite complex warp effects without a whole lot of effort.

NOTE

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You can save the warping effects of either the Mesh Warp tool or the Warp Brush as a deformation map, and any deformation map can be loaded in either one of these tools. To save a deformation map, click the Save icon in the Deformation map segment of the Mesh Warp or Warp Brush's Tool Options palette and enter a name for your deformation map. To load a deformation map, click the Load icon there and select the deformation map you want.

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