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Inspiring
April 8, 2017
Question

stroke jaggies

  • April 8, 2017
  • 2 replies
  • 1178 views

Why is it that my stroke comes out with the "jaggies" in Photoshop?  Is there any way to prevent this?

Using CC 2015.5 with Windows 7.

Thanks

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    2 replies

    S_Gans
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    April 8, 2017

    2 Questions for you to have checked:
    1) Are you sure you're not looking at it way zoomed in? In other words, have you tried ensuring you're seeing your stroke at 100%?
    2) Do you have "Antialiasing" checked on in the control bar?

    Adobe Community Expert / Adobe Certified Instructor
    Trevor.Dennis
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    April 8, 2017

    S_Gans  wrote

    2 Questions for you to have checked:
    1) Are you sure you're not looking at it way zoomed in? In other words, have you tried ensuring you're seeing your stroke at 100%?
    2) Do you have "Antialiasing" checked on in the control bar?

    The zoom ratio would be my first thought as well, but — at a stretch — it could be brush spacing and not jaggies that the OP is seeing.  This would only be apparent with other than round brush presets.  Exaggerating to make a point, this was done with a square brush at the default 25% spacing.

    davescm
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    April 8, 2017

    One more thought to add to the above.

    Are you stroking the path with a brush (which even at the hard setting will have anti-alias applied to soften the curves) or with the pencil tool (which will have no anti-aliasing) . See below same path stroked with a hard round brush then with pencil.

    Dave

    Chuck Uebele
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    April 8, 2017

    Can you post an example?

    pslane1Author
    Inspiring
    April 9, 2017

    Anti alias stays on almost all of the time.  I did some experimenting and found that just some of the images are getting jaggies, and some are okay.  Sometimes it's so bad I'd rather just duplicate and make the lower layer a bit larger for my outline.

    Since only some of the images are doing this, I believe it may be the artist (Meaning me. ) is not drawing a smooth line.  This is the only example I can find tonight, but if I run into it again I will come back and re post.

    This is the kind of stroke I am talking about.  The one in the layer styles.

    Trevor.Dennis
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    April 9, 2017

    What is the image size in pixels?  I mean the size of the heart, and not the entire canvas.

    Have you resized either the image of the heart?

    Check your preferences and see what your Preferences, and see what Image Interpolation is set to.  If Nearest Neighbour like below, set it so something else.

    Select your heart layer, and initiate Free Transform (Ctrl t).  If Interpolation is set to Nearest Neighbour, change it.

    Hmmm....  I am looking at the screen shot above, and suspect I have sussed what is going on.  Did you draw the heart freehand and fill it?  And if yes, did you use the Pencil?  If yes, make that the last time you EVER use the pencil in Photoshop.  Use a fully hard brush.

    Two freehand hearts, the inner one done with the pencil, and outer with a hard brush. At smaller sizes it would be even more apparent.