| Nolified |
| My mares are the same way. |
| SwankPony |
| I've always brought the horse to the background, perhaps I'll try just working on the horse and give those brush settings a try ! |
| Jericho Stables |
| Ahh, I find that a smaller softer brush gives better results, in my opinion at least. |
| SwankPony |
| I start by removing the big chunks, then zoom to like 500% with a hard brush around the egdes. |
| Jericho Stables |
| I use a round brush and usually around 30-40% hardness. And usually like a 9-11% size brush. And I zoom in like 300-500%. I also always work on the horse on its own. I don't add it to the background until it is 100% done. I put a layer behind the horse, usually some brown/tan color, and erase on that. |
| SwankPony |
| Every tutorial I've read uses the lasso, but I'm with you, Jeri, I like using the eraser tool. It always tends to leave behind an outline though. |
| Angels angels |
| I used to do the lasso to roughly cut it out then go back with the eraser to clean it up |
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| SwankPony |
| I've always brought the horse to the background, perhaps I'll try just working on the horse and give those brush settings a try ! |
| Jericho Stables |
| Ahh, I find that a smaller softer brush gives better results, in my opinion at least. |
| SwankPony |
| I start by removing the big chunks, then zoom to like 500% with a hard brush around the egdes. |
| Jericho Stables |
| I use a round brush and usually around 30-40% hardness. And usually like a 9-11% size brush. And I zoom in like 300-500%. I also always work on the horse on its own. I don't add it to the background until it is 100% done. I put a layer behind the horse, usually some brown/tan color, and erase on that. |
| SwankPony |
| Every tutorial I've read uses the lasso, but I'm with you, Jeri, I like using the eraser tool. It always tends to leave behind an outline though. |
| Angels angels |
| I used to do the lasso to roughly cut it out then go back with the eraser to clean it up |
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