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Get paid
for commercial fashion, magazine & product advertising design?!?
Yes you! Learn the skills of Madison Avenue Advertising Designers
here.
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Get paid
for commercial fashion, magazine & product advertising design?!?
Yes you! Learn the skills of Madison Avenue Advertising Designers
here.
(opens in new window)

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Create a new document with these settings. Note that we are
using 300 dpi because this will be made for print. We are keeping
RGB but for most publication you will use 4 color CMYK mode. This is
just an approximate size that can be used for printing booklets.
Consult with your printer on their standards.

Choose a light green color from the color picker. You are going
to fill a new and blank layer with this color. Now choose pattern
fill (from the pop-up adjustment/fill layer icon on the bottom of
the layers palette) and pick this pattern.

Change the mode of the pattern adjustment layer to Overlay. Doing
this just gives us a little texture which you can see...it just
creates a little more of a ‘background’.

Here’s the fun part. Grab your pen tool (with setting on ‘work
path’) and create two points as indicated. Immediately when you
create the second point, don’t release yet instead drag your mouse
down. Create a somewhat similar arc and then release. This will take
some practice. Why? Because mine isn’t even perfect. Hehe. The pen
tool will take a while to truly ‘master’. But anyways, what you have
left is a work path.

Now, go to the Paths palette and you have your work path. You
could also have created new Anchor points at the bottom corners and
bring it up to connect, but lets look at what we have. Right click
on the work path and ‘make selection’. Now we have this selection
(it automatically connects the 2 points in the straight line as you
can see).

Now grab your polygonal lasso tool on ‘add to selection’. We are
going to expand this ‘selection’ to include the rest of the space to
the bottom of the document. Use the poly lasso tool as shown to
‘add’ this area to the selection. Now you have most of the document
selected with our rounded shape/corner.


Now, create a new layer by clicking on the new layer icon. Ctrl
or Cmd click on the icon to select it with the marching ants. Now
press Alt or Option Backspace to fill this layer with your
foreground color (doesn’t really matter, white is fine).

Now choose a great photograph (for example from the 2,000+ Images
CD) and drag it in with the ‘V’ Move tool.

Now what you are going to do is simply create a Layer: ‘clipping
group (or ‘clipping mask’ in Photoshop CS’). What this does is place
this new (bitmap) photograph within the layer beneath it which
happens to be our curved shape layer. Are you following along? Ain’t
this cool stuff..Keep following along b/c it gets better.

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