There are no stupid questions, only stupid people...
SavannahMan
Registered Users Posts: 142 Major grins
Basic stupid question...
I see all the beautiful photos that are shadowed on frames, and I don't know how to do this. I have Photoshop 7 and demo of Paint Shop Pro 8, but the paint shop looks a little basic and I have no clue how to do it in Photoshop. Any kind hearted people out here???:cry
I see all the beautiful photos that are shadowed on frames, and I don't know how to do this. I have Photoshop 7 and demo of Paint Shop Pro 8, but the paint shop looks a little basic and I have no clue how to do it in Photoshop. Any kind hearted people out here???:cry
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Comments
Open a new white back ground in photoshop bigger than your picture.
drag and drop your picture onto the back ground... or open your picture and then select and drag it over any way you want, just get it onto the white background.
Choose "layer" then "style" and choose drop down shadow...
then crop the whole thing to the size you want. and save.
If this is confusing say so.. I can be very confusing... just ask my husband.. and if youdon't know photo shop it may not be as simple as it sounds to me.
Let me know.. I can show you with print screens too.
goodluck
lynn
or....
I open a new image that's larger than the original. About an inch or so.
Using the paint bucket, fill the new frame with white. Copy the original
and paste it in a new layer. Double click on the new layer in the "Layers"
window. That gives you the layer style menu. Select drop shadow (to adjust
the shadow, select drop shadow). I usually like to set the blend mode to
multiply, opacity between 70 and 90 %, play with the angle to get it just
right. Distance determines how far the shadow is from the image--just
enough to float the image. About 20 pixels. Spread controls the spread of
the shadow--you can leave it at 0. Size is the size of the edge. A size of
zero will make a very crisp shadow where a size of 49 gives you a very
diffuse shadow. Then give your image an inner shadow to balance the
drop shadow and you're all set.
Ian