If you’re creating a drop shadow using Photoshop’s built-in layer styles (from the Add a Layer Style pop-up menu in the Layers palette), rather than setting the Distance and Angle numerically, you can adjust it visually. Just move your cursor outside the dialog right into your image, click on the shadow itself, and drag it where you’d like it.
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Use a clipping group to place an image inside of a background of text, with another layer of text placed in front to create depth.
In this tutorial Corey shows you how to take an existing image and turn it into it’s own custom brush.
In this tutorial Corey creates a realistic-looking coin effect using the channels palette and the lighting effects filter.
Create really cool borders in under a minute to use on virtually any one of your photos or even video for that matter.
This tip relates to a previous tip, where you created what’s called a “text box” so that your type wraps within a text block, rather than running in one straight line. The tip is this: If you’ve created some standard type by just clicking and typing rather than creating a paragraph text block, you’re not out of luck. While the Type layer is active, just go under the Layer menu, under Type, and choose Convert to Paragraph Text. Now your type will wrap within the text box boundaries, and you can edit the boundaries by adjusting the corner and center points.