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Post by Seremela Lorelonda on Aug 9, 2005 11:20:03 GMT -5
Well , the old banner was too small ,so I enlarged it. But that made it grainy.
Dark said he'd make one but I know that he is busy with his own board. If he stills wants to make one he is welcomed to sicne this one sucks. It was jsut a quick one I did becuase I didn't want the grainyness of the old one.
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Post by dark on Aug 9, 2005 12:04:47 GMT -5
Whoah, ack sorry Semie. I had plenty of time I just honestly forgot all about it. I love the one you just put up though. What do you mean it sucks. Tis great.
Quick question. If you did that on photoshop how do you get the words to be raised like that so they cast a shadow in the back?
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Post by Seremela Lorelonda on Aug 9, 2005 12:17:16 GMT -5
I don't have photoshop.
I have Iphotoplus4...came with the old scanner we used to have.
In the eext thing there is a setting to do shadows. But I know there is a way in photoshop also. Which photoshop do you have and I'll ask one of my friends who has it?
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Post by dark on Aug 9, 2005 12:24:51 GMT -5
Photoshop 6.0 and Image ready I believe
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Post by Seremela Lorelonda on Aug 9, 2005 13:26:47 GMT -5
This is the closest I could find to shadow. (My friends not on to ask) There are several ways to create outlined text in Photoshop, but in older versions of Photoshop you had to render the text or recreate the outline if the text was changed. In Photoshop 6.0 and earlier we have the stroke layer style which offers a great deal of flexibility. Difficulty: Easy Time Required: 2 minutes Here's How: 1. Select the type tool and create your text. 2. At the bottom of the layers palette, click the 'Add a layer style' button and choose 'Stroke...' from the menu. 3. Click the Color swatch and choose a color for the outline. Or you may choose a gradient or pattern for the outline from the fill type menu. 4. Adjust the size of the stroke using the slider at the top of the dialog box. 5. Choose outside, inside, or center from the position menu to control where you want the outline in relation to the layer content. Tips: You may need to adjust kerning or tracking after adding an outline to the outside of your type. You can do this from the Character palette in Photoshop. For a ragged outline, set the Blend Mode to Dissolve and lower the opacity in the Layer Styles dialog. You can apply a 3D bevel effect to only the outline by using the 'Bevel and Emboss' layer style with the 'Stroke Emboss' effect style. Experiment with it. I found it here if you want to search around. graphicssoft.about.com/od/photoshoptutorials/
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