![]() When all the blocks are of uniform color and When everything is to your liking, use the Eyedropper tool to select theĬorrect colors and fill any off-colored blocks. Then takeĪnother screen capture and compare again. In Illustrator, and copy and paste blocks where they're missing. So you can see both the original and the mosaic at once. Lower the pasted layer's opacity to around 70% Into Photoshop, overlaid on top of the raster map so you can see which blocks Take a screen capture of Illustrator and paste it Planning ahead is one of the best habits you can develop.ĭelete any blocks that throw off the map's accuracy, and add blocksĪnywhere they're missing. They'll just interfere with the effects you may want to apply later in Same, Fill Color to select the rest of them. Select one of the white blocks, and then choose Select, Next, ungroup the mosaic so you have access to the individual blocks thatĬomprise the image. ![]() If it doesn't look right, undo it and makeĬhanges until you're happy with the results. Set to 0 will cause the edges of the tiles to touch, which is what you want.Ĭlick OK to create the mosaic. ![]() Unless you want it to be larger or smaller than it is now. Leave New Size set as is, to match the dimensions of your original image, What all the ugly, jaggy shapes arethey're actually the original I set Number of Tiles to 60 for both Width and Height, as detailed inĭelete Raster option otherwise, in the next step, you might end up wondering Select it then apply the Mosaic filter, located under Filter, Create, Object Open the image you just created in Photoshop, this time in Illustrator, and The PhotoshopWorld Dream Team Book, Volume 1 ![]()
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