![]() ![]() Warp options: Arch, Bulge, Shell Lower, Shell Upperįor example, the default Bend is 50%, the Horizontal and Vertical are both set to 0.00. Once you select a Warp design, use the handles or the field boxes across the top (Bend %, Horizontal %, Vertical %) to manipulate the warped design to fit the space you need to fill. The options include: Arc, Arc Lower, Arc Upper, Arch, Bulge, Shell Lower, Shell Upper, Flag, Wave, Fish, Rise, Fisheye, Inflate, Inflate, and Twist.ħ. Warp: This one is the most fun! Use this feature to wrap your text around a rainbow, up (or down) a staircase, along the curve of a wave, while twisted, bloated, or squeezed. Use the eight handles of this feature to alter the perspective of shapes and objects-for example, to make the front of the object larger and the back of the object smaller, adding the illusion of distance and depth to a flat surface.Ħ. Perspective: This is also grayed-out for Text editing. For objects, you can use this feature to push and pull on any of the eight handles to completely twist, distort, or bend the object.ĥ. Distort: This is grayed-out for Text editing. JD Sartain / PC WorldĬhoose Scale to size text, and Rotate to swivel textĤ. Again, use the field boxes across the top to physically enter the skew (as described above) or, use the handles to skew the text. Skew: Slants the object or text vertically and horizontally. Or, you can use the handles to rotate the text.ģ. Again, you can use the field boxes across the top and physically enter the rotation (as described above). Rotate: This feature is self-explanatory. But if you need the text taller, but not wider or fatter, but not taller, or adjusted to precisely fit into an exact space, then use the handles and scale.Ģ. ![]() You could simply increase or decrease the point size of the font if you want the text enlarged or reduced proportionately. Or, you can use the handles (top left, middle, right bottom left, middle, right and center left center right) to stretch or shrink the object or text size. You can use the field boxes across the top and physically enter the size using Relative Position by Reference Point: X and Y by dimensions: Width and Height or by degrees: Angle, Horizontal, or Vertical. Scale: Increase or decrease the object or text size. Select Edit, Transform, then choose a transformation effectġ. Now, let’s transform the text using one of Photoshop’s Object/Text Editing features: Select Edit > Transform, then choose a transformation effect from the list: Scale, Rotate, Skew, Distort, Perspective, Warp plus Rotate 180°, 90° CW, 90° CCW, Flip Horizontal, Flip Vertical. Select the Text/Type tool and enter: Fabulous Fonts.Ġ4 Define Paragraph alignment, margins, line spacing, etc. If, however, you upload a CMYK file to a website on the Internet, the image does not display, because the Internet does not support CMYK images.Ģ. ![]() If you forget to convert your RGB file to CMYK before you print it, don’t worry, the “new” printers automatically convert it for you.CMYK files are almost double in size to RGB files, so always work in RGB, then convert later, if necessary. ![]() Use this Color Mode for images or text that’s printed on your local printer, at a professional printing company or publisher. CMYK means Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, and Black. Select this Color Mode for screen, Internet, and photographs. Create your “new” Photoshop files at 300 ppi, then scale down if necessary-reduction in pixels or size does NOT distort the image like upgrading or enlarging. The enhanced image will suffer from something called compression noise-fuzzy, bloated, distorted pixels that create blurry halos around all the objects in the image. Be aware however, that once you create your image at 72 ppi (pixels per inch), you cannot enlarge it to 300 ppi (called Resample) successfully. Use 300 (pixels/inch) for printed materials and 72 (pixels/inch) for Internet/website images. ![]()
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