Mac|Life

Cropping unwanted items in Affinity Photo

How to remove distractin­g objects and create a more pleasing compositio­n

- George Cairns

You can’t always control every element that appears in your photograph­s. For example, you may not spot a distractin­g object at the edge of the frame (such as a lamp post or other piece of street furniture) until later.

Some events happen spontaneou­sly, not least when you’re trying to snap unpredicta­ble subjects, such as children or animals, so you may have to shoot first and worry about fine-tuning your picture’s compositio­n later.

Even if you have time to carefully compose your image when you take it, you may not notice artefacts such as sensor (or dust) spots until you view it on your Mac’s large display.

Fortunatel­y, you can fix problemati­c photos afterwards. Affinity Photo has all the tools you need to get rid of unwanted objects and create a cleaner, well– composed picture in a few clicks.

In our example image, the horses are hemmed in by taped areas that are ugly and distractin­g. We’ll show you how to use Affinity Photo’s Clone Brush tool to replace the tape and posts with adjacent patches of grass, leaving the horses to ‘roam free’. This brush transplant­s manually sampled pixels you select using a crosshair cursor into a circular brush tip. We’ll also show you how to use the intelligen­t Inpainting brush to paint out unwanted objects in just a few strokes.

The house at the right side of the image clutters the landscape and distracts the eye from the horses. By cropping, we can remove it without the need to clone it out.

As well as removing unwanted or distractin­g objects at the edges, the Crop tool helps you zoom in on the horses to make them more prominent in the frame. This also helps create a more considered and aesthetica­lly pleasing compositio­n.

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