There are lots of little tricks to add special effects to images. This tutorial shows a few of the popular ones, done in Paint Shop Pro 7. Below is the image we'll be working with, taken from my free photos archive.
Grid Overlay
A nice addition to images, usually when used in layouts, is to add a grid layer over the top. When the image you want to add a grid to is open in PSP:
- Go to Effects>Texture Effects>Blinds.
- Click on the Auto Proof button
so you can see what the effect will look like.
- Make sure "Horizontal" is checked.
- Play with the options until you find the effect you want. I set the width to 1 and the opacity to 30.
- Click Okay.
- Now the image is Interlaced. To complete the grid, go to Effects>Texture Effects>Blinds again.
- The settings you used last time will have been remembered. All you need to do is uncheck "Horizontal".
- Click Okay. Now you have an image with a grid.
Selected Areas
If you make/edit graphics often, you're familiar with the selected area look, with the dotted lines, or "marching ants". You can incorporate this look into your actual graphics.
- Select the area you want to show as selected, using either the Magic Wand
or Freehand Select
tool.
- Once it looks the way you want, press the Print Screen (Prt Scr) key on your keyboard.
- Then press Ctrl+V on your keyboard, or go to Edit>Paste>As New Image.
- Crop the resulting image to the area you want, and save it. That's it!
Semi-Opaque Text Areas
If you're using a background image that is too bright to have text put over the top, you can add a semi-opaque text area to the part you want text to be readable on, like this:
- To do so, open your image, and go to Layers>New Raster Layer.
- Set opacity to whatever value you'd like. The higher the opacity, the easier the text will be to read.
- Click Okay. Then click on the Shape tool.
- Set your foreground color to null (click on the black arrow) and your background color to white, or whatever colour you'd like the text area to be.
- If you haven't got the Options toolbox open, click on its icon to open it.
- Select the shape you'd like the area to be. Make sure "retain style" is unchecked.
- Click and drag to draw the shape on the image layer. It may take a few tries to position it right.
- When you've got it the way you want, go to Layers>Merge>Merge All (Flatten), so you can save it as a jpeg.
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