The In’s and Out’s of Photo Editor- Week 2

Table of contents for The Ins and Outs of ACDSee Photo Editor

  1. The In’s and Out’s of Photo Editor- Week 1
  2. The In’s and Out’s of Photo Editor- Week 2

Hi everyone! Liz is back with another challenge for ACDSee Photo Editor. I’m going to utilize some of the tutorials we already have here at DigiScrapInfo so we can get to know this program better.

First off, did you see this post?

ACDSee invites you to help build ACDSee Photo Editor 2008!

I’m so excited- we’re all going to be able to give input! So if you don’t have ACDSee Photo Editor yet, you can wait until the 25th and you can download the beta, or download a 30 day trial of our current version. Then we’ll post challenges here every week so you can work your way around the program. Isn’t that exciting! The good news is, you’ll be able to play with it for 90 days!

Anyway, let’s move on to the challenge. If you currently have ACDSee Photo Editor, please feel free to jump right in. If not, wait until the 25th and download it then so you can play along! :)

We’re going to focus on drop shadows today. They are an integral part of a digital layout. My goal is to make my digital layout look like it was done as a paper layout. A good way to help with that is drop shadows.

I LOVE shadows in Photo Editor. They are done on a separate layer, so you can manipulate them as much as you want! I think they look realistic, but I admit, it took me a few layouts to get a good groove going. So I’ll share the settings I use at the end.

Here is the tutorial we will be using:

Drop Shadows with ACDSee Photo Editor

Here are some examples I’ve done:

Eyan5thBirthdayAWeb FirstBottleWeb

ADoorBellWeb BlessingDayBWeb

A few tips that I’ve learned. I am by no means an expert on this, and I’m sure most of you already know this, but we cater to everybody- new user, or very experienced, so I’ll post it anyway. :)

When working with drop shadows I have used this tip as a general guide. The closer you want your element to appear “attached” to the paper, the smaller a shadow to use. For example, I put a very small shadow on pictures, background paper, and small elements, but use a larger shadow for things like flowers, ribbons, and frames. Here are some excellent tutorials regarding shadows from Digital Scrapbook Place.

Digital Realism: The Shadow Knows

Shadows and Perspective

These helped me tremendously when starting out.

Anyway, I want to see some layouts with some cool shadow tricks. Post a link in the comments section to your layout, and feel free to let me know what settings you used, any tips and tricks you discovered, etc.

Here are my settings:

I almost always use the same shade, and vary the opacity. Unless I’m working with a dark background, I will usually go to R48, G48, B48 or 303030, which is a dark gray. If I’m using a dark background, I will usually use black. I adjust the opacity down to between 60-80%, depending on what I’m using it for.

For Photo mats, photos, background papers, and small elements such as glitter, buttons, etc:

Offset- 8-12, Blur- 4-5, Opacity- 80%

For frames, cardboard, etc:

Offset- 13-16, Blur- 9-10, Opacity- 75-80%

For Ribbons, flowers, and big shadows:

Offset- 17+, depending on what I want, Blur- 11+- again, depending on what I want, Opacity- 60-75%

Feel free to play with them and come up with your own! I admit, I haven’t played with them a lot, but it is fun once you get the hang of it. I’m pleased with how mine turn out in print. They look realistic enough to me.

Thanks for playing! See you next week!


Posted on : Feb 21 2008
Posted under ACDSee Photo Manager 10, DigiScrapping, Marketing Websites |


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