Saturday 16 May 2009

Lilac & Cream


Here is another tut for you all.
Remember to leave some LUV.♥
A Thank You goes a long way!
and Thank YOU To all who do!
Enjoy!

Click tag to get full view.
You must have a working knowledge of PSP.
I am using the beautuful artwork of Jennifer Janesko.
You must purchase a license to use this art.
You may do so at CILM
HERE

Supplies:
1 tube of choice & Font of choice.
I used TheNautiGal
Mask of choice.
Amazing Freebie Called Lilac Dreams.
It Can be found at:
Simply Sensational Scraps:
HERE
Thank You Monica

OK, Ready?
Open your supplies in PSP. Open a new
canvas 700x700, you may resize/crop later.
Floodfill white. Add a new raster layer. Selections,
select all. Resize & Copy and paste a paper
from the kit into selection. Select none. Apply a mask
and on your layers pallette merge mask group.
Resize and paste frame and place above your mask layer
click inside your frame,selection,modify,expand by 4 resize &
paste paper of choice,selection,invert delete on your keyboard,
then selection and then select none move paper below frame.
Resize and paste tube of choice place below your frame layer
duplicate tube then move the duplicate layer above you frame,
Grab your eraser tool and erase any bits of tube from the bottom.
Resize and paste ornament 2 place above mask layer,but under frame,
duplicate,image,mirror and place so they stick on top of frame.
Now simply resize and add some flowers,
butterflies and a bow, pasting them all
as new layers all around your frame.
Drop shadow all elements and Tube.

See mine above or make it your own!
As always mine is just a guide. Now X out
the bottom layer and your mask layer. Merge visable
the remaining layers. Un X the hidden layers. Position
all layers nicely. Image Resize 80-90% Bicubic
resample all layers checked.

Hint: You can X out the bottom white layer
before saving to have a transparent bkg for forums..

Add your Artist © and your Name and
WooT!! You Are Done!
Hope you enjoyed my tutorial & thanks for trying it!

Written by Maz May 12th, 2009
Any resemblance to another tutorial is purely coincidental

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