Make the brush just big enough to encompass the item you want to clone. So you pick something from the current photo and select the clone tool. However, I think could use another something in the foreground of the photo. This landscape for example is a fine picture. Examples of the Clone ToolĪn easy example is wanting to add something more to the picture in the foreground or anywhere else. Keep in mind it clones in the same path that you move as you’re printing the newly cloned subject. Brush size is very important as it shows you how much of the object you’ll be cloning. You click on the Clone Tool under the advanced section of the Basic Editor Tab, and select the brush size. Otherwise, using the clone tool is fairly straightforward. NOTE: THIS VIDEO IS FROM AN OLD DESIGN OF IPICCY BUT THE PRINCIPLES ARE STILL THE SAME. You can watch this video to learn that (the audio has static, but the information is useful): It can also help you do retouches on your personal images in general. However, the clone tool can do things like help remove pesky double chins. The most simple answer is cloning to simply add more of that particular object to your image. The Clone tool has a bunch of different uses and purposes. The Toolbox is going to be a series of articles in which we discuss the tools available in iPiccy Photo Editor. We’ll talk about the strengths, weaknesses, and appropriate times to use these tools. Last time we talked about the Dodge/Burn Tool, but today we’re talking about the Clone Tool.
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