Using Paths
What can you do with paths after you've gone to all the trouble of creating them? Well, a lot of things. In Photoshop, you can use paths to remember selections you want to use repeatedly. You can also fill a path area or define the color, border, and so on of the outline of the path. Paths indicate selections or lines, but they don't actually appear on your canvas unless you add some paint to them to make them show up. You can fill a path or stroke it, or both. Stroking adds a stroke of paint over the path. Filling places a color or pattern inside the path. Figure 13.17 shows a freeform path that has been stroked with red and filled with a pattern.
Figure 13.17. A filled and stroked path.

Use the Active Layer
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Turning Paths into Selections
In Photoshop, paths one way to permanently save selections. This can be incredibly helpful when you think you might want to reuse a specific selection later. When in doubt, create a path so that the selection will always be available.
Try it YourselfConvert a Path into a SelectionYou already learned how to convert a selection to a path. The following steps show you how to convert a path into a selection:
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Filling a Path
Filling a path means just what you would expect. Select a path, choose Fill Path from the palette menu, and you'll get the same kinds of options you get for filling a selection, plus a couple of extras. In the Fill Path dialog box (see Figure 13.20), you can choose a color, a pattern, or a snapshot to fill the area. You can also choose a blending mode, opacity percentage, optional transparency, anti-aliasing, and a feathering value. If the path consists of two separate subpaths, only the one selected will be filled or stroked.
Figure 13.20. The Fill Path dialog box has many options.

Stroking a Path
Stroking a path affects the outline of the path, not the entire area enclosed within a path. Select a path and then choose Stroke Path from the palette menu. The dialog box enables you to choose the tool you want to use, from Pencil and Brush to Blur and Sponge (see Figure 13.21).
Figure 13.21. The Stroke Path dialog box allows you to determine which stroke you'll use.

Using the Shape Tools
In a hurry? Can't draw? Don't despair. Photoshop provides a handy arsenal of predrawn shapes, which it calls its Shape tools . These can be used as paths and be filled or stroked as needed. They can be resized, to a certain extent reshaped, and placed wherever you need them. The rounded rectangle is great for masking photos. The polygons are useful if you need a bunch of stars or other unusual shapes. The custom shapes will amaze you. Figure 13.22 shows the Shape tools.
Figure 13.22. These tools can draw filled or unfilled shapes.

A Multitude of Shapes
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Figure 13.23. Select one of these options.

Figure 13.24. These options aren't available until you've drawn the first shape.

Add a Shape to the Custom Shapes Palette
Create a shape using the other Shape tools, or select the path containing the shape you want to use. In Figure 13.25, I've used the star, drawn a path around it, and filled it. To add it to the Custom Shapes palette, make sure the path is selected in the Paths palette, then choose Edit
Figure 13.25. Give the shape a name to add it to the palette.
