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Author How to achieve this?
Kevin Mullins

2004-01-29, 1:28 pm

Hi,

I am very new to PS (I have CS) and am trying to get my head around a
few techniques. The main problem I have when searching the groups/PS
Help is that I don't really know what to "search" for.

For example, I would like to achieve something similar to the image
here: http://www.sportingrarities.com/ima...ng_rarities.gif

Not the the text, more the "cut out" image in the background. Now, I
have an image, and I can get as far as extracting the image, reversing
the selection and deleting the image from the layer (effectively
leaving me with a cutout hole of the image). My quesiton is: how
would I create the "shadow" (like the grey shading the image
addressed)?

If you could just let me know the technique that this is know as it
would be somewhere for me to start....?

Thanks in advance.

Kevin
Flycaster

2004-01-29, 2:28 pm

"Kevin Mullins" <register@kdmtechnologies.com> wrote in message
news:a0f51554.0401290931.4fa83d05@posting.google.com...
quote:

> Hi,
>
> I am very new to PS (I have CS) and am trying to get my head around a
> few techniques. The main problem I have when searching the groups/PS
> Help is that I don't really know what to "search" for.
>
> For example, I would like to achieve something similar to the image
> here: http://www.sportingrarities.com/ima...ng_rarities.gif
>
> Not the the text, more the "cut out" image in the background. Now, I
> have an image, and I can get as far as extracting the image, reversing
> the selection and deleting the image from the layer (effectively
> leaving me with a cutout hole of the image). My quesiton is: how
> would I create the "shadow" (like the grey shading the image
> addressed)?



The image has 3 layers, white background, cut-out above, and type above
that.

There are any number of ways to do this, but here's a quick one to try:
Click on the cut-out layer (making it the active layer), and bring up the
layer style dialogue (dble rt click). Dble click on stroke, set it
to:outside, fill type: gradient, style: shape burst; then play from there.
If the inside of the gradient does not align with your cut-out, it's because
your selection is feathered. If necessary, modify feathering to 0. (Note:
layer blending options won't work on empty selections - if the cut-out is
transparent, simply fill it to match the background below it and then fire
away.)

Have fun, but don't overdo it. Simple is better, imo.





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Ian Firth

2004-01-30, 2:28 am

In article <4019510b$1_1@corp.newsgroups.com>, noyb@nospam.com says...
quote:

> There are any number of ways to do this, but here's a quick one to try:



How about just using a drop shadow layer effect, or an outer glow set to
black and multiply ?

To the original poster, try reading the manual, it will do wonders.

--
Regards,
Ian Firth
Kevin Mullins

2004-01-30, 10:28 am

Ian Firth <ian@divsoft.com> wrote in message news:<MPG.1a83a64c31d77f76989783@netnews.comcast.net>...
quote:

> In article <4019510b$1_1@corp.newsgroups.com>, noyb@nospam.com says...
>
>
> How about just using a drop shadow layer effect, or an outer glow set to
> black and multiply ?
>
> To the original poster, try reading the manual, it will do wonders.



Thanks for both sets of sugestions - it gives me something to start
with.

Regarding the manuals, unfortunately I just don't have the time at the
minute to read through until I find what I am looking for (thats why I
asked specifically what this technique was called so I would have
something to start looking for).

Thanks again,

Kevin
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