Matching
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a. | Lock
Transparency | g. | Patch
Tool | b. | sponge
Tool | h. | Edit
Tools | c. | Clone Source | i. | Snapshot | d. | All
Layers | j. | Minimum | e. | Floating Selection | k. | Source Point | f. | Jitter | l. | Dodge
Tool | | | | |
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1.
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Decreases or
increases the saturation of an image, depending on the mode setting in the options bar.
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2.
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A command in
the filter menu that can be used to expand the size of objects in a layer, especially useful with
slid colors.
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3.
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An image
element that hovers above the surface of an image, permitting you to move o transform it without
harming the underlying original.
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4.
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An option in
the layers palette that limits your edits to the existing opaque pixels in a layer.
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5.
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Drag a
selection outline to heal the selected area, whether it was created with this tool or some other
selection function.
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6.
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Dramatically
enhanced in Photoshop CS4, this item lightened portions of an image as you paint, which makes it
great for brining out naturally shaded areas such as eyes.
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7.
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A loose
collection of features that modify the existing color or luminosity of a pixel without replacing
its content.
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8.
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The spot
from which the healing brush samples information when repairing a flaw in an image.
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9.
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When using
the paint bucket, turn on the check box in the options bar to fill areas of line art on an
independent layer.
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10.
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A series of
percentage values in the brushes palette that permits one or more attributes to vary randomly over
the course of a brushstroke.
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11.
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This palette
lets you scale, rotate, and even flip the source image as you paint it into the destination, as well
as preview the source as a translucent overlay.
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12.
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A special
kind of state n the History palette that remains available well after twenty operations.
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