Adobe PHOTOSHOP CS2 User Manual page 387

Hide thumbs Also See for PHOTOSHOP CS2:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Dragging an edge node to increase the size of a plane to accommodate your edits
Note: The bounding box and grid of a perspective plane is normally blue. If there's a problem with the placement of the
corner nodes, the plane is invalid, and the bounding box and grid turn either red (severe problems resolving the plane's
aspect ratio) or yellow (problems resolving the vanishing points of the perspective plane). When your plane is invalid,
move the corner nodes until the bounding box and grid are blue.
(Optional) To tear off a perpendicular plane, select the Create Plane or Edit Plane tool and Ctrl-drag (Windows)
4
or Command-drag (Mac OS) an edge node along the bounding box.
You can create as many planes as you want. To paint, clone, or transform and maintain a consistent scale and orien-
tation, it's best to tear off additional planes rather than create unrelated planes. If a newly created plane does not
properly line up with the image, select the Edit Plane tool and move a corner node to adjust the plane. Adjustments
made to connected planes are constrained; when you adjust one plane, all the connected planes are affected.
2
1
Tearing off multiple planes keeps the planes related to each other so your edits are scaled and oriented in the proper perspective.
If you have overlapping planes, Ctrl-click (Windows) or Command-click (Mac OS) to cycle through the overlapping
planes.
2
Overlapping planes
See also
"Bounding box and grid alerts in Vanishing Point" on page 382
3
4
1
ADOBE PHOTOSHOP CS2
379
User Guide

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents