Lightroom’s masking Brush tool is incredibly useful, and its Auto Mask feature, which helps to keep you “painting inside the lines” (so to speak), makes it even more helpful as it tries to “sense” the edges of areas where you’re painting with the brush to keep you from accidentally painting over something you didn’t want to paint over.
Here’s an example:
Now let’s undo our last brush stroke, and try again but this time with Auto Mask turned on.
If you make a mistake (or Auto Mask makes a mistake – hey, it happens), or you let that center crosshair stray over onto an area you didn’t mean to, you can “paint away” those areas you didn’t mean to mask. Just hold the Option key (on Mac) or the Alt key (on a Windows PC) and it temporarily changes your brush into an Erase Mask brush. Now, shrink the size of your brush (using the left and right bracket keys on your keyboard), and paint over those areas you didn’t want effected, and as you paint it removes the spillover.
OK, What’s the 10% Where It’s Not Awesome?
This sounds pretty great – why not always leave Auto Mask turned on? Well, it works great when you’re near the edges of stuff (like we were here), but if you’re using the Brush to paint over large areas, having Auto Mask on will not only show your brush’s performance because now it’s searching for edges as you paint, so it tends to “lag” a little (or a lot), but also since it’s trying to sense edges, it can also leave small gaps and not paint as smoothly over areas. So, my simple rule is this: leave it off until you get near an edge. Then press the letter “a” to toggle Auto Mask on when you need it, and when you’re done painting near the edges of things, and you’re back to large open areas, hit “a” again to turn Auto Mask back off. Easy peasy.
Hope you find that helpful. Have a great Monday everybody!
-Scott
P.S. I know a lot of you use On1 Software’s plug-ins to extend what Lightroom Classic can do. If that’s you, check out full two-day, two-track conference coming up next month on getting the most of your plug-ins and your Lightroom/On1 workflow. Here’s the link with details.
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