![]() I have two options – I can ‘paint out’ the areas where I don’t want the effect applied (the background, here) or I can click the Invert button to mask the whole picture and just paint in the areas I want to adjust. You’ll see there are a number of buttons for modifying and working with the mask. At the moment it’s a blank white, so not masking is being applied. Clicking this button creates a mask for this filter, ready for me to edit.Īs soon as you create a mask, the button changes to a small thumbnail rendition of the mask. So how do I fix that? With this small mask button in the Curves filter’s title bar. So if I raise the center of the curve, the car is brightened, but so is the whole image. I want to brighten up the car, so I’ll select the Curves filter. ![]() ![]() ![]() In the Effects panel, click the Add Filter button and choose a filter. I’ll have a look at masking presets a little later on, but for now let’s start with one filter at a time. ![]() This is the easiest way to see how effect filter masks work. ![]()
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