This guide can be completed in any graphics program with tools comparable to Photoshop, but all illustrations are geared toward Photoshop CS2 - you will need to experiment if you're using a different program. With that said, let's get going, shall we?
One: To start, we need something to tape down. I'm using a piece of parchment paper I also created in Photoshop. You can use the process to create your own at www.my-photoshop.com/bydesign/nature-parchment/natural-parchment.html or use a found graphic. Either way, open your object to tape down in Photoshop and get ready.
Two: With our paper ready, we're going to jump right into doing the sticky tape. First, set your foreground color to white. Use your rectangle shape tool to draw a small rectangle. Right-click and rasterize the shape after you've drawn it, to get rid of the jagged edges. (When you rasterize, make sure to click the layer, not the layer mask.)
Three: You will probably want to zoom in for this step. Use your polygonal lasso tool to give each side of the tape uneven edges - the look of tape that has been cut by the teeth of the tape dispenser. Select one side with your polygonal lasso tool, and hit the backspace key on your keyboard to erase the selection. Repeat on the other side.
Four: Now, we add a two quick layer styles. Click Layer - Layer Style - Stroke. Change the color to gray and the Size to 1 px. Then, click the Drop Shadow option. Leave the drop shadow settings alone and click OK.
Five: Two more quick things and we're done! First, lower the Opacity of your tape layer to about 50%. Then, duplicate the layer 3 times (making four sets of tape, one for each corner). Finally, click Edit - Transform - Free Transform and adjust each layer so that it sits at an angle on your corners. Wa-la! Perfect sticky tape.
Published by Phebe A. Durand
A journalist turned instructor who decided that a steady income wasn't worth creative frustration, Phebe Durand (Lolaness) now focuses on ways that technology can enrich our lives, her works range from writi... View profile
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- My-Photoshop - Tutorial and Plug-In site dedicated to Photoshop - www.my-photoshop.comGood-Tutorials - Huge Photoshop database - www.good-tutorials.com - or visit all of AC's tutorials listed on Good-Tutorials here.Pixel2Life - Another Tutorial database, this one is much more than Photoshop - www.pixel2life.com




