How to Create Cartoon Dolls Tutorials ![]() |
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Just what is a layer? Ok, to help you understand what a layer in a painting program is, lets visualize that you have drawn a house on a peice of paper.
![]() Draw something on a blank black background image. I have used some flowers done with tubes from my tubes page. It really doesn't matter what you do here -- even a plain rectangle will suffice. ![]() ![]() First of all, have your layer control panel open, by clicking on ![]() A large options screen will pop up. You need not change anything, just give that layer a new name to make it easier to identify. Where the text Layer 1 is highlighted next to Name, I have typed in Spider. The layer control panel now looks like this: ![]() As you can see the bar saying Spider is highlighted; that means that the Spider layer is the active layer, and anything done to the image will only appear on that layer. Now, click on the ![]() Select Arachnophobia (or any other tube) and place one somewhere on the spider layer by clicking on the mouse only once. You can modify the size of the picture tube by clicking on the scale arrows (or type in a percentage). If you don't like what you did, hit ctrl + z keys to undo that action. Only the picture tube you layed down will dissapear, nothing else will be affected. ![]() To move the bug (if you want to) click on the mover tool ![]() Just repeat the same steps like above, but rename this layer to something else. Click on another tube image - I will use the beetles tube as an example - and place the beetle on the new layer. ![]() If you let your mouse hover over the layer title bars (in the layer control panel), a small thumbnail of the contents of the layer will appear.
![]() Create another new layer, and name it Color. Your layer control panel should now look like this: ![]() Now choose the flood fill tool ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Now on the color palette, click on one color for your foreground (the top box) and a contrasting color for the background (the bottom box). These two colours will blend into each other in a circular sunburst gradient effect. ![]() You can also click the small arrow inbetween the two colors to swap them around. This would swap which color would appear on the outerside of the circle.
![]() Now, drag the opacity bar next to the color layer title in the layers control panel. You will notice that the lower you drag it, the more you can see through it, like a sheet of plastic. ![]() ![]() Now you want to move the color layer so that it is between the insects and the flowers, which means only the flower will be affected by the color change.
Drag the color layer's opacity slider back to 100%. You will now see only a colored background with the bugs on top of it. The flower is only temporarily hidden beneath the other layers. You will see it again once you start changing the color layer's blend modes. ![]() Click on the words 'normal' and a menu will pop up with all the blend modes. Work your way down through the various modes in it. Each blend mode does a different thing to the colors on the layer beneath it. The best way to see what does what is to experiment. There is no simple way to explain the different effects but to experience them yourself with what they can do. ![]() Try clicking on and moving the bugs around some more. Change the bugs, add more bugs. Add some text to the background layer as I have done below -- try different colours. Add an Airplane or anything else you can think of!!! Generally mess with the layers until you are comfortable with how very simple it all is! Merging the Layers When you are happy with your graphic, save it as a PSP file. The PSP formt will keep all the layering info so that you can later go back and change anything at that time.
Note : If you want to merge any number of individual layers during the course of constructing your graphic, you can do so by hiding the layers you do NOT want to merge. Hide these layers by "switching off" the visibility toggles for those layers -- i.e. click on the icon immediately to the right of the layer's label/name; the layer will become invisible until you click on its visibility toggle icon again. This is very useful if you want to keep your background layer and merge everything above it -- just temporarily hide the background, then merge the rest of the layers/visible. (Make sure you have clicked on one of the active layers, not the background, before merging.) ![]() ![]() That should be a clear explanation of layers, and I hope it was clearly written. I adapted this tutorial from ART DEPT - PSP Tutorials, except I tried to rewrite them so that younger people as well as older people might understand them. There is a lot more to PSP, but I definately don't want to write a whole book about it. Please, learn to experiment with the program on your own as well as seeking out tutorials on the net. PSP doesn't bite ;) And neither do its help files.
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