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Participant
November 23, 2010
Question

Quick Selection Tool won't deselect

  • November 23, 2010
  • 4 replies
  • 61686 views

I can't seem to deselect an area that mistakenly was selected. I pressed the Alt key but it won't deselect the area. Am I not doing something I should? Also where can I find some tutorials on using the Quick Selection tool. I am using CS5.

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    4 replies

    Participant
    November 24, 2010

    I hit Crtl Z to un do it

    Zeno Bokor
    Inspiring
    November 24, 2010

    The Quick Selection tool is a combination of a brush and the selection tools so just clicking outside the selection won't deselect, whether you hold down Alt or not. If you want to deselect then press Ctrl+D

    Participating Frequently
    November 24, 2010

    OK, since the headline said "Quick Selection Tool won't deselect", I assumed the OP had problems with partial-area deselection of the Quick Selection Tool, that is, the tool selected too much and some (but not all) of the selection had to be de-selected.

    Antero

    ShirleyGSAuthor
    Participant
    November 24, 2010

    Antero52, thank you for your advice. You were correct in assuming that my question concerned partial deselection. I will also try your suggestion of clearing the quick selection tool using the Quick Mask Mode; and also bringing my attention to Martin Evening's book. Thanks again

    Participating Frequently
    November 24, 2010

    In his CS5 book, Martin Evening teaches what he calls a “double-Q” trick. The quick selection tool learns what to select when you paint and what not to select when you alt-paint (can be option-paint on the Mac). After using the quick selection tool for a while, the learning can be so strong that it will be next to impossible to deselect a portion of the selection . But changing to quick mask mode (Q) and back (another Q) clears the learning memory of the quick selection tool, while keeping the selection made so far. Then it will be far easier to deselect what has been selected previously.

    Best regards,

    Antero

    Noel Carboni
    Legend
    November 24, 2010

    If you've just selected something, and it's not what you wanted, you can use Ctrl-Z to step back one step in the History (i.e., to before the selection was made), then try again with a different Tolerance setting or by clicking on a different point.

    With the Quick Selection tool current, make sure you review the settings at the top of the Photoshop main window.  They affect how the tool will work:  A smaller Tolerance value will select fewer pixels, Anti-alias makes edges smoother, Contiguous will only select one block of contiguous pixels (vs. selecting similar pixels all over the image), and Sample All Layers will allow you to select based on what you see in the composite multi-layer document vs. just what's on a particular layer.

    -Noel