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January 3, 2019
Answered

Rasterizing image required before edit, why?

  • January 3, 2019
  • 1 reply
  • 13848 views

Hello, I brought an image from LR to PS as a smart object. I am trying to edit with patch tool and it is giving me this message. "This smart object must be rasterized before proceeding. Edit contents will no longer be available. Rasterize smart object." I'm confused, I thought vector images were only rasterized. I am confused. Thank you.

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Correct answer

Hi Rob, thank you for responding. I am new to PS and there is certainly a

steep learning curve. Thank goodness for Youtube! If I brought the photo

over from LR without being a smart object, modified as I would like and

then rasterize, would that work? After I rasterize is there another step

before I save as jpg for printing? Thank you.

On Thu, Jan 3, 2019 at 12:54 PM Rob de Winter <forums_noreply@adobe.com>

1 reply

Community Expert
January 3, 2019

Hey

You have to see a Smart Object as a 'container' filled with an image or vector (in this case, a when you double click the layer icon in the layer panel, you'll go back to that image in Lightroom again to edit the image). You can't use the Patch Tool or other retouching tools on smart objects directly.

You can try this: first create a new, empty layer on top of the smart object.

Then use the Clone Stamp Tool, the Healing Brush Tool or the Spot Healing Brush tool. You can choose something like this in the Options Bar: Sample All Layers (Spot healing brush), Sample: current layer, current & below or All Layers (Healing Brush and Clone Stamp Tool) --> see screenshot below.

Unfortunately this option is not available with the Patch Tool.

Maybe someone else has another option, but I think this is the only way Hope this helps!

Correct answer
January 3, 2019

Hi Rob, thank you for responding. I am new to PS and there is certainly a

steep learning curve. Thank goodness for Youtube! If I brought the photo

over from LR without being a smart object, modified as I would like and

then rasterize, would that work? After I rasterize is there another step

before I save as jpg for printing? Thank you.

On Thu, Jan 3, 2019 at 12:54 PM Rob de Winter <forums_noreply@adobe.com>

Community Expert
January 3, 2019

Hey, haha no problem, that’s what this forum is for

When you import the photo without making it an object, you don’t have to rasterize it any more (it’s already a rasterized object then). You can just edit it in Photoshop and save it (for example) as a JPG directly in Photoshop.

You only import it as an object if you want to edit it backwards in Lightroom again.

Hope this helps