This
feature entered the world of photo editing algorithms a few years ago.
Simply put, it enables magnifying or reducing photos without distorting
any important elements (such as the main theme). Finally Adobe Photoshop
CS4 also introduced such a feature last autumn. Let's see how it works
out in a very obvious case.
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1. Load the photo
If
you want to resize—for example, reduce—this picture, you have two
choices: distorting its content, or making the whole picture
proportionately smaller.
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2.
A transformable layer
One of the old methods is Transform, which also enables resizing.
If your photo is on a simple background layer, it is recommended to convert it to a normal resizable layer using Layer/New/Layer. Just click OK
on the dialog that appears and you'll have an editable layer. You'll
also need this step for content-aware scaling (discussed later).
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3.
A gaunt distortion
For now, let's stay with the traditional Transform feature. It is invoked by pressing Ctrl+T.
In the options bar at the top, enter 50% for W (Width). This halves image width.
You
can observe easily what happens: picture content is distorted.
Everything will be half as wide while retaining full height. The bird
silhouettes are undergoing a nasty distortion. Imagine the same with a
human portrait, a building or a round ball—not the best way to resize
an image, is it?
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4.
Everything's smaller
It is better than that to resize both dimensions so that the aspect ratio of the whole content stays unchanged. For a 50% reduction, this means everything will look the same (but half as large) in the picture.
OK,
but what if we want only the unimportant areas such as the background
or the environment to change, and the main theme (e.g. a portrait or a
building) to stay as it is?
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5.
Background only
This is what content-aware scaling, a novelty in CS4 does. Click Edit/Content-Aware Scale to access it.
(Keep in mind that photos on a basic background
layer—that is, any digital photo—can be resized only after converting
it to a separate layer as described in Step 2!)
The top option bar looks very much like that of Transform. Percentage settings for height and width are here as well. Let's try the half-width resizing which we did with Transform.
Only width will be reduced. Content-aware scaling produced a smaller
image while leaving the bird silhouettes untouched. Only the pixels of
the unimportant background were crunched together. Of course we chose
this picture on purpose. Such a strong contrast difference makes it
easy for the feature to bring a nice result. Most of the time it can
preserve contrasty, easily isolable themes, such as
the sharp silhouettes here. It can keep them intact while resizing the
rest of the image. The photo's orientation changed from landscape to
portrait without distorting any important content.
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6.
It's smaller while it isn't
The
situation is the same if we also halve image height. The area will be
thus reduced to one quarter, but the bird silhouettes, appearing as the
main theme, still retain their original size. Of course, Content-Aware Scale
crowded them together quite strongly. Still, their size and shape is
unchanged, only the background, the sky has been compressed, but as it
shows no significant image content, the viewer won't notice it so
easily.
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Hope you can
learn something new from this tutorial.
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