Design House Digital

Posts Tagged ‘Photoshop’

13 Days of Halloween – Hybrid Paper Dolls

Hello! It’s Decorator Jennifer Valencia here with another Happy Halloween Hybrid idea for you all.   This is one of my all-time favorite crafts to do with my daughter — paper dolls.  She LOVES playing with paper dolls of all varieties. We’ve done Dora and Diego, Disney Fairies,  Tuff Puppy, various Richard Scarry characters, and more.   We have often made paper dolls as big as she is (using easel paper), and small ones that fit into her hand.  Today I’ll give you a quick tutorial on how to make small Halloween ones.

Ghostie Paper Dolls for a 4-year-old

Playing With Halloween Paper Dolls

Probably you are thinking: “Seriously? I need a tutorial on how to make paper dolls?”  Well, sure, if you want to make the really cool ones, I say!  Also:  Isn’t it true that seeing something you know how to do can still spur your creativity or remind you of something fun to make?  I mean, I don’t necessary need instructions on how to eat a Snickers bar, but if I saw instructions on how to eat one, I’d probably start craving one, and then I’d get one, and then the Mars Company would have cleverly made $1.00.   (Off topic: Did you ever see the Seinfeld show where they all start eating Snickers Bars with a knife and fork?  Do you think candy sales went up after that one originally aired?)  And I don’t need instructions on how to dry my hands in the public bathroom at the mall, but they like to tell me anyway with cute little wiggly lines and a picture of hands on the dryer.  I found one that I liked at HappyPlace.com. Helpful in its own way, no?

Wash Hands, Get Bacon! From HappyPlace.com

Back to topic: Paper dolls. We use these for several things. First of all,  it’s fun for kids to plain-old-PLAY with them; my daughter tells stories about them and moves them around and makes houses and habitats for them.  Also, we can practice counting with them. Sometimes if I bring out a batch of brand new paper dolls, she is excited enough by them to practice counting in English and Spanish, and doing some addition and subtraction practice with me.  We can also work on fractions (1/2, 1/3, etc.)  We do this not by ripping a Tinkerbell into two even pieces, but by batching — 2 fairies here, 2 fairies there…1/2 in each pile.  (I just wanted to clarify so you don’t think we’re paper-thirsty crazed doll-killers over here.)  And if I make paper dolls based on animals or objects,  we can play vocabulary games in Spanish with them.  If you are learning another language,  this can be a fun and easy way to learn new vocabulary words.   Sometimes we play hide-and-seek with them, too:  She and I take turns hiding the paper dolls around the room and then have our very own Easter Egg Hunt to find them.

Deja Vu Check: If you’re feeling a sense of deja vu, it’s not a mistake. I have done these paper doll posts before for other holidays.  I’m sort of wondering how many more of these I can do before I wear it out?  One, two more? But there is nothing quite like rehashing my old wheels, so here goes!

Instructions: First, get a roll of clear packing tape, sharp craft scissors, plain white paper, and some cute embellishments from Design House Digital.  I recommend this kit called Life In October by Kate Teague. It’s an oldie but a goodie, because it has CUTE Halloween thingies in it, and the last thing I want to give a 4-year-old (at least MY 4-year-old) is creepy ghouls and goblins, kwim?  Those are great for other things…just not for kid paper dolls. After all,  I do not personally live in the Adams Family home. Nor do I want to wake up to a toddler nightmare.

You can find the kit here:

http://www.designhousedigital.com/kate-teague/life-october-illustrations

Directions: Start a 8.5×11 page in Adobe Photoshop or Elements.  Drag several of the embellies onto your page and resize them as desired.  We like to always make a “mom” paper doll and then “kids” for her. So if we have large ghost, that will be “mom,” and then I need to make some smaller ones to be her “babies.”  I’m sure you know this, but to resize an element: Make sure the appropriate layer is highlighted. Hit CTRL T to get your transformation box, hold down the SHIFT key, and drag one corner of your embellie up or down to make it larger or smaller.  Then hit ENTER to accept your new size.

Resizing a Candy Corn - If Only We Could Do This For Real, Right?

I like to fit as many of these as humanly possible to conserve paper, because every 1 cent saved is…well, I guess I just like to conserve paper. Good for the environment and all!  Print out your page and then coat it front and back with slightly-overlapping layers of clear packing tape. Smooth the tape down carefully so it does not create large air pockets.  Using tape to laminate the dolls is a total God-send, in my opinion.  It’s WAY cheaper than buying a laminating machine and laminating paper, it’s easy to cut, and it makes the dolls semi-permanent.  They can still get ruined if, say, then are immersed in a cup of apple juice, but they can handle damp or sticky fingers and still live to see another day.

Packing Tape - We Go Through These Like You Wouldn't Believe

Then, once your taping is complete,  cut out all of the dolls with your craft scissors.  Regular scissors will drive you insane because all of the images will have intricate edges that big old dull scissors will turn into cheap-looking mincemeat of a paper doll. And a cheap-looking paper doll is just not worth having, right?

When they are done, present them to your child, and have fun together!  Here are some images of my daughter’s paper dolls.

Playing With Halloween Paper Dolls

Showing Off A Paper Doll Spider

Thanks for reading along with me.  Please let me know if you decide to make some Halloween paper dolls…and post pictures so we can all “oooh” and “aaaah” in the gallery.  Please also comment if you already use or like the packing tape idea!  And now I will sign off. Wishing you gigantic candy corns….or not, if you don’t like candy corn…but definitely a happy fall season!

Saving Your Layout for the Web

Hi all! Decorator Shannon here with a quick tutorial on how to save your layout for the web. I’ve seen questions on the forums about how people get their layouts to look so crisp and sharp in the galleries. The answer is a quick series of steps after you’ve saved your layout.

These instructions are for Photoshop CS3 and Photoshop Elements 6. If you have a different version the menu options just may be slightly different than what I list.

First, you want to open your full size (12×12 or 8×8) .jpg file of your layout.

Next, you will resize your layout. In CS you do this by image>image size. In PSE it’s image>resize>image size. The dimensions will be 600×600 pixels and 72ppi. Change the pixels/inch first and the size second.

Next, you will sharpen your image. This is what makes it really pop on the web, instead of having that slightly fuzzy look. You’ll do this by applying an unsharp mask to the entire image. In CS you’ll find this in filter>sharpen>unsharp mask. In PSE you’ll find it in enhance>unsharp mask. My settings are as follows; amount: 150, radius: 0.3, threshold: 0. You could play around with it a bit if this doesn’t look quite right to you.

Now you will save your new file. Make sure you choose “save as” and not “save”, you don’t want to overwrite your full size file. I always save my file with the same name as my original, but I add the word “small” to the end.

There you have it! A few easy steps to really make your layouts pop when they’re uploaded to the web. I’ll end with a visual of how my layout looks before and after resizing and using the unsharp mask.

Before:

After:

Tutorial: How to use the Selective Color Tool in Photoshop

Hello, Hello! Karla here and I’m going show you all how you can tweak your colors in Photoshop using the Selective Color Tool! I use it ALL the time to make the colors on my photos pop or change the color entirely. You can even use it on your scrapbook supplies and papers! Let me show you how using Photoshop or Elements.

Here is an original photograph of some pot tops…or something lol…

Now this looks pretty cool like this but I thought the colors could use some punch. But I only wanted to change the red and teal plates for this example. The selective Tool is perfect for this because it’s an easy way to target select colors. To use it your going to go to IMAGE > ADJUSTMENTS > SELECTIVE COLOR

Then your going play with the settings. 

I decided to change the red and blue pot tops. Since the blue color of the tops looks kind of teal-ish; the Cyan option worked better then the Blue. To pick what color family you want to change you just pull down the COLOR tab. I wouldn’t worry about the custom tab. I then got this result

So then it was ready to scap ^_^ I used this technique on all the photos in the layout below.

[ kits used: Fly Girl, Digi Essentials (stitches), Digi Essentials 5 (letter brushes) and Digi Essentials 7 (Metal Brads), Page template from Tiffany Tillman ]

Some things to note:

  • To get reds more red, I start by selecting the red color from the color pull down menu. The next step I do is lower the CYAN percentage. Anytime you want to pump up or down your reds, the Cyan % does it beautifully! And as you can see from my example I tweaked some of the other settings as well.
  • The blue color of the tops looks kind of teal-ish; the Cyan option worked better then the Blue. If you have ‘blues’ in your photo that you want to change then try both the Cyan and Blue percentages to see which ones work best for that image. Or use both ^_^

Using the Select Color Tool is not just for our photos. We can use it on our digi stash! Let’s say you love a paper but wished the flowers were pink instead of orange or that a particular shade of blue just wasn’t ‘blue’ enough for ya; using the Selective Color Tool can help in a lot of those situations! I’m going to show you an example using some papers from my Felis kit.

We’ll start out with the small square or the original pink and kraft

I’m want it to be purple and kraft. So I played with the settings like so.

I put all dials to 100% in the red pull down then…

In the Magenta option I set all the dials to 100% accept the yellow, that I set to -100%

Now my paper is purple and kraft. Or how about a pale green?

Dude…this tool is super neat-o and so simple to use! BUT….there are times when you want to change a specific color and you can’t really get it to look right because not matter what you do it changes other things as well. For example. Take a look at this paper from the same Felis kit. Here is piece of the the original paper.

Now let’s say I wanted to change the orange leaves green and leave everything else as-is. I run into the problem of changing ‘like’ colors.

When I turned the orange leaves to the green color I was looking for it also changes the pink design in some of the leaves to purple. This happens sometimes. Not a lot but it does happen. It seems to acure in more complex designs. But yeah, play with the settings and have fun pumping up those colors and changing your favorite papers to suit your needs! It’s really cool and I must say; the Selective Color Tool has become one of my favorite Photoshop tools!

I hope to see you tonight in the chat room! My chat starts @ 9pm EST! YAY!

Enjoy and until next time, Happy Scrappin’!




DIY- Handmade Mini Note Pads

I am always on the look out for cute little note pads I can keep in my handbag for those times I need to jot something down. I decided I wanted to make some of my own.

These are just the right size and can be personalized for a wonderful handmade gift.  I used my new Wild Flower Digital Paper Kit releasing tomorrow.

What you need:

Several Sheets of blank paper- for the notepad
Patterned Paper
Template (can be found on my blog)
Printer
Template
Rubber Cement (or Padding Compound)
Scissors/Craft Knife
Scoring Tool
1/8″ hole punch (I used the We R Memory Keepers Crop-A-Dile)
4.25″ piece of 1/4″ braided elastic
2 Eyelets and a tool for setting them (I used the We R Memory Keepers Crop-A-Dile)
2″ Circle Punch
Brad (optional)

Making the blank notepad:

1. I took 8.5″x11 sheets of paper to my local copy/print store and had them cut them into 1/8 ths. So that I had several 4.25 x 2.75″ sheets of paper to make the blank notepad. You could also cut these yourself.

2. Take the 4.25 x 2.75″ papers and make a stack about 3/8″ thick.

3. Tap the whole stack together on one of the sides so that one side of the stack is completely even.This is the side you will now glue together to form the spine of the notepad. To hold the stack together while gluing you can use clamps or two boards with weights on top (as I did) so that you get a tight spine. Then spread your glue on that even side. I used rubber cement but Padding Compound is probably the best. Padding compound is made especially for making these note pads and can be found online or I also found it at my local Xpedx paper supply store.

4.  Let the pad dry completely.

Making the pad cover:

1. Select and open your favorite digital patterned papers in Photoshop. (I used my new Wild Flower Kit–find it here on Thursday)

2. Open up the .png template in photoshop. (get the template here)

3. Open a new photoshop file sized at 12″x12″, 300dpi and white background. Copy both the paper and template into this new file.

4. With the template as the top most layer, crop your patterned paper layers to bleed just outside the template boundaries for each pad template. If you wish you may also use the circle tag templates included. I used some of the Wild Flower Elements and Wild Flower Alphabets on the tags as well.

5. Print. I printed on Epson double sided 12×12″ Scrapbook paper. I also printed a 12×12″ pattern on the backside so that the inside of the pad cover would have a pattern as well.

6. Cut out the pad cover using the outside rectangular lines as as guides. The two perpendicular inside lines are for scoring the spine, score those and fold inward. Use a 2″ punch or cut the circular tags.

Attaching the elastic to pad cover:

Now it’s time to attach the elastic that will serve as a closure for your pad.

1. Cut a piece of 1/4″ braided elastic to aprox. 4.25 length.

2. Locate the two hole guides on the back flap of the pad cover.

3. Take one end of the elastic and hold it on top of one hole guides. Center it vertically and leave approx. 1/16th of and inch of a tail toward center of the pad horizontally. Using an 1/8″ punch make a hole in in both the elastic and paper. You won’t be able to see the circular hole guide at this point but just approximate it. (it doesn’t have to be perfect).

4. Take your eyelet and insert through the hole you just made. With top of eyelet being on the outside of the pad cover.

5. Set eyelet.

6. Repeat for the other side and attach the other end of the elastic using the other eyelet. Both ends of the elastic should be inward toward the middle of the pad cover. You may need to cut a little bit of the elastic ends off if there is some showing after you set the eyelet.

Finishing up:

1. Add embellishments at this time. I added circular tag to front cover using a brad to attach.

2. Now attach blank pad to cover, by painting rubber cement to blank pad spine then setting it inside spine of pad cover you scored and folded earlier. Be sure to let it dry while applying pressure so that it adheres well.

3. Test out your elastic closure and you are finished!

I love giving these little hand-made, personalized pads to friends and family. I hope you enjoy this little hybrid project!

Christmas Framed Decoration


Merry Christmas! Decorator – Tiffany Bodily here today bringing you a custom framed holiday decoration. This project was created using Karen Funk’s lovely kit – Christmas Joy.
First you will want to create your paper printouts using Photoshop and your printer. I like to print my papers out on cardstock. Measure your chipboard frame and then create the frame piece and the insert piece accordingly. My frame was 6 3/4 inches square with a 3 inch opening in the center. I bought a package of 12 for $2 at the craft store.

Next you will want to gather your supplies.
Supplies needed:
The printouts you created
Chipboard Frame
Mod Podge & a brush
Foam mounting squares
Ribbon
Bell
Craft knife & mat
Stamp pad
Glue gun or glue dot

Using Mod Podge adhere the large decorative page to the frame, let it dry and then use the craft knife to cut the center of the frame out. Use stamp pad to ink the edges of the frame and the inside cut out of the frame. I then like to Mod Podge the frame again.

Use foam mounting squares to attach the insert to the back of the frame. This creates a nice dimension.


Tie ribbon around the frame as desired and use a glue gun or glue dot to attach the bell.


Your fun framed decoration is now complete and you can use it to add cheer to your home or as a gift. I found a cute photo holder at my local craft store which added a nice touch. Hope you enjoy crafting this project.

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